It's a tragedy. Adults are engaged in serious efforts to end decades long impasse and McCain is throwing poop at them.
One of my exceedingly rare (like ~1 per year) contributions to the twittersphereaverse.
It's a tragedy. Adults are engaged in serious efforts to end decades long impasse and McCain is throwing poop at them.
...and they never heard from Hawkian again.
One of my exceedingly rare (like ~1 per year) contributions to the twittersphereaverse.
I need one of those windows from Fringe that can see into alternate universes, because I would never want this to be a reality, but I'd love to see the outcome of it.We really dodged a bullet by not electing that asshole.
As sad as it is to say, the stress of the Presidency probably would've killed him and we would've been stuck with...
Oh dear.
I need one of those windows from Fringe that can see into alternate universes, because I would never want this to be a reality, but I'd love to see the outcome of it.
I saw an ad for paid forum posting on gaf over the weekend. Nothing like drumming up support for your cause by making some think you have a bigger representation that weekdays truly there.I screwed up and started reading the comments WTF @ people opposing the idea of free public wifi?!?
Lame. Can't believe he wussed out.
I need one of those windows from Fringe that can see into alternate universes, because I would never want this to be a reality, but I'd love to see the outcome of it.
"Drawing him back into the room, Johnson said, 'Now I want to say something about all this talk that I'm a conservative who is likely to go back to the Eisenhower ways or give in to the economy bloc in Congress. It's not so, and I want you to tell your friends Arthur Schlesinger, Galbraith, and other liberals that it is not so. I'm a Roosevelt New Dealer. As a matter of fact, to tell the truth, John F. Kennedy was a little too conservative for my taste.'"
-Johnson to Walter W. Heller, chairman of Kennedy's Council of Economic Advisers, only days after Kennedy's assassination. The topic was Kennedy's tax-cut bill.
Poligaf.
I need some help.
I need to collect as much info (Blogs/studies/reports/op-eds/interviews/whatever) that can help me explain why the debt is not a problem, at the least at this time, in the best, most thorough, yet easy to understand way.
I know krugman is especially good at this though more obscure sources would be awesome too. My main points are going to explain the fact that we have a fiat system and thus default its technically impossible as well as looking at bond market shows that the "markets" have no fear of the debt and continue to trust the US treasury as the golden standard of stability (also bringing up Japan to show how these debts have never done damage).
I know EV has a bunch on this but was wondering if there was any non-mmt information. I've seen a bunch of posts through out my lurking but I can't seem to find much. The more information the better. Anything can help.
I know this isn't the previaling view here, but I'd say that the debt is a problem just not an immediate one and addressing it exacerabates our immeiate problems.
MMT, at least as interpreted on this thread, seems liek magical thinking to make problems go away. I doubt it's that simple, or it would be a more widespread view.
Can you imagine if someone who succeeded the presidency after an assassination of X said "X was a little too liberal/conservative for my taste" nowadays? Just days, or hell, even a few years after X was assassinated?
We'd probably end up with another assassination on our hands :/
Poligaf.
I need some help.
I need to collect as much info (Blogs/studies/reports/op-eds/interviews/whatever) that can help me explain why the debt is not a problem, at the least at this time, in the best, most thorough, yet easy to understand way.
I know krugman is especially good at this though more obscure sources would be awesome too. My main points are going to explain the fact that we have a fiat system and thus default its technically impossible as well as looking at bond market shows that the "markets" have no fear of the debt and continue to trust the US treasury as the golden standard of stability (also bringing up Japan to show how these debts have never done damage).
I know EV has a bunch on this but was wondering if there was any non-mmt information. I've seen a bunch of posts through out my lurking but I can't seem to find much. The more information the better. Anything can help.
I don't know too much about MMT, but the indicators by which mainstream economists decide if the debt is too high (inflation, yield rates, unemployment) all suggests that it isn't.I know this isn't the previaling view here, but I'd say that the debt is a problem just not an immediate one and addressing it exacerabates our immeiate problems.
MMT, at least as interpreted on this thread, seems liek magical thinking to make problems go away. I doubt it's that simple, or it would be a more widespread view.
I don't know too much about MMT, but the indicators by which mainstream economists decide if the debt is too high (inflation, yield rates, unemployment) all suggests that it isn't.
Why do you think it's too high?
What do you think our debt should be?
Poligaf.
I need some help.
I need to collect as much info (Blogs/studies/reports/op-eds/interviews/whatever) that can help me explain why the debt is not a problem, at the least at this time, in the best, most thorough, yet easy to understand way.
I know krugman is especially good at this though more obscure sources would be awesome too. My main points are going to explain the fact that we have a fiat system and thus default its technically impossible as well as looking at bond market shows that the "markets" have no fear of the debt and continue to trust the US treasury as the golden standard of stability (also bringing up Japan to show how these debts have never done damage).
I know EV has a bunch on this but was wondering if there was any non-mmt information. I've seen a bunch of posts through out my lurking but I can't seem to find much. The more information the better. Anything can help.
I don't know too much about MMT, but the indicators by which mainstream economists decide if the debt is too high (inflation, yield rates, unemployment) all suggests that it isn't.
Why do you think it's too high?
What do you think our debt should be?
So even though you can't tell what is the desirable level of debt, you think we have too much of it.I can't answer these questions with any depth. Generally, I tend to think of debt to GDP as the issue. If we were to reach a point where we had difficultly servicing the debt without issuing more currency, that would be a problem.
Again, this has nothing to do with MMT, I'm talking in pure Keynesian terms here, though for the record, I don't think MMT says that.I realize MMT says we can issue money at will, but the results of that action are theoretical. Debt has owners, and such an action will affect them.
Mainstream economists mostly use inflation to figure that out.Mainstream economists don't really know when the debt is too high. No one actually knows if the debt level for a sovereign money producer matters.
I can't answer these questions with any depth. Generally, I tend to think of debt to GDP as the issue. If we were to reach a point where we had difficultly servicing the debt without issuing more currency, that would be a problem. I realize MMT says we can issue money at will, but the results of that action are theoretical. Debt has owners, and such an action will affect them.
Mainstream economists mostly use inflation to figure that out.
Oh man this will be funny. God I hope he loses.
Kasich just announced Ohio will accept Medicaid funds for Obamacare, and set up exchanges; good news. He also pointed out the obvious here: without an expansion in Medicaid, the poor will just continue to flood emergency rooms thus increasing everyone's health care costs. I may no agree with him on just about anything, but good to see he is doing the right/logical thing here.
He gets it. It's a reminder to me of one of the many reasons Obama's reelection was a big fucking deal. For all the gridlock we're going to see for four years, stuff like this will have a big impact on millions of lives.“We are going to extend Medicaid for the working poor and for those who are jobless trying to find work,” Kasich said at a press conference in Columbus. “It makes great sense for the state of Ohio because it will allow us to provide greater care with our own dollars.”
RT @danmericaCNN: Sen. McCain says he will not fillibuster Hagel. "I don't think it's appropriate and I would oppose such a move."
My problem is not that you can't tell the appropriate levels of debt, I can't tell you that either, is that you pass judgment on the size of the debt without knowing that figure, which I find problematic.Chichlov, ease up. I'm not making a case, I'm explaining my already self-proclaimed weak understanding.
If Debt-to-GDP were too high, more revenues would be put to servicing debt and less into public spending, which in turn would depress the economy.
To steal Krugman (an MMT hater by the way) point - so because sometime in the future, we might be in a situation that would require us to do some painful things, we must do them now?As far as debt holders, they are the demand. If (wildly extreme case here) we starting issuing currency and causing inflation, then demand for debt could shift elsewhere (currently inconceivable but so is issuing currency to cover debt) and I don't think anyone knows what the results would be.
I can't answer these questions with any depth. Generally, I tend to think of debt to GDP as the issue. If we were to reach a point where we had difficultly servicing the debt without issuing more currency, that would be a problem. I realize MMT says we can issue money at will, but the results of that action are theoretical. Debt has owners, and such an action will affect them.
Chichlov, ease up. I'm not making a case, I'm explaining my already self-proclaimed weak understanding.
If Debt-to-GDP were too high, more revenues would be put to servicing debt and less into public spending, which in turn would depress the economy.
BM: Interest on the debt.
To steal Krugman (an MMT hater by the way) point - so because sometime in the future, we might be in a situation that would require us to do some painful things, we must do them now?
That doesn't make too much sense to me.
Did you guys see the report on him making 150k for crazy little 'work' right before he was nominated? I saw it fly by on Tumblr but didn't register everything.Speaking of McCain: https://twitter.com/BuzzFeedAndrew/status/298550584787730433
I no longer have any doubt that Hagel will be confirmed.
McCain...
I hope Obama personally negotiates with the Iranians for a week behind the scenes just to hear the outrage...and then emerges with an agreement for them to end their nuclear program and re-enter the global community. What better way to expose that Israel, the GOP, etc have no interest in peace - and are solely concerned with perpetual warfare.
Seems as good of a place as any to put this:
U.S. and States Prepare to Sue S.&P. Over Mortgage Ratings
The Justice Department, along with state prosecutors, plans to file civil charges against Standard & Poors Ratings Service, accusing the firm of fraudulently rating mortgage bonds that led to the financial crisis, people briefed on the plan said Monday.
Up until last last week, the Justice Department had been in settlement talks with S.&P., these people said. But the negotiations broke down after the Justice Department said it would seek a settlement in excess of 10 figures, or at least $1 billion, these people said, which would wipe out the profits of S.&P.s parent, the McGraw-Hill Company, for an entire year.
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/02/04/u-s-and-states-prepare-to-sue-s-p-over-mortgage-ratings/
I don't know why you'd want to avoid MMT references since that appears to be what you intend to argue.
http://hir.harvard.edu/debt-deficits-and-modern-monetary-theory
Rating agencies are a joke.Hold the fuck up.
The ratings people are the same as the text book price gouging people?
Fuck this planet
So what exactly does it mean to object to "issuing more currency" when creating more money is the norm?
None of this should be taken to mean that MMT says that a government can or should have limitless debt. Indeed, MMT recognizes that monetarily sovereign governments do not have to issue debt at all. So if the amount of money your government is promising to pay people in the future concerns you, then you ought to be arguing that it should stop making those promises. But what has to be recognized is that the government's ability to spend has no connection to the debt it takes on. All of that debt is completely voluntary on the government's part.
Debt to GDP has risen while interest payments to GDP has dropped.
We are almost at historic lows for that right now.
And the current rates are very low. And future debt burden can be wiped out by an improving economy.
I don't think saying "we need to figure out what is the desirable level of debt before we say if we have too much or too little of it" is the same as saying "debts aren't a problem".Similarly, I don't think government debt is bad, in fact I'd say it's essential to a lot of our economy. It's a matter of how much.
Lastly, whether on a fiat system or not, the money supply is controlled. I don't think abandoning or extremely loosening that control is a good idea.
And no, I don't know what the right levels for these controls should be. My initial post was simply to the comment that "debts aren't a problem" which I think is overly simplistic.
That exactly what Keynesians prescribe.Don't misunderstand me, I'm not couching some sort of pro-austerity view in terms of "later issues" I really mean it's something to be addressed at a time other than now. As in, booming economic times. Even then, I see the economy more growing that the debt shrinking, just the debt not keeping pace.
I don't think saying "we need to figure out what is the desirable level of debt before we say if we have too much or too little of it" is the same as saying "debts aren't a problem".
Saying that the current level of debt is not a problem is not simplistic, it's at worst wrong.
And I have never seen any economists who suggests that the money supply doesn't matter.
That exactly what Keynesians prescribe.
Countercyclical, yo!
We didn't really have boom and bust cycles when we were doing that.
That's 100% understandable, and if you look carefully at my post history (though I'm certain you can find better ways to entertain yourself) I'm sure you can find times where I accepted (implicitly or explicitly) that we have a debt problem."Fiscal conservatism" has been one of the last vestiges of my conservative upbringing to die, but 2008-present really killed it. I see Europe (in particular Greece and Ireland) and I see us, and I wonder why all the tea party people want us to be like Europe when we had been doing exactly what was working until they derailed it.
We also spend way too much on defense (but I agree with the general crux of your argument).The problem with our long term debt (if it is a problem) is healthcare costs. But the problem with healthcare costs is not limited to public spending but also private spending.
Fact of the matter is that we are spending now and into the future way too much a percentage of our GDP into healthcare. Everything else is fine.
But if we allow sequestration to happen, "the world as we know it will end"!We also spend way too much on defense (but I agree with the general crux of your argument).
Hold the fuck up.
The ratings people are the same as the text book price gouging people?
Fuck this planet