Oh what the hell Fox!? Seriously?
I wish I could still be surprised by shit like this.
Oh what the hell Fox!? Seriously?
We're talking about a long period of time, it was both at different points. Right now I'd say we are in a period of stagflation.
Right now I'd say you're wrong. And we've never had hyperinflation.
Stagflation requires high inflation. Our problem right now is we have so little inflation.
We're still more at a threat of deflation than hyperinflation.
This is about the point where I concluded you were trolling last time about the Sandy relief workers.
We have inflation (2%) we also have no growth, we didn't ever as a country have hyperinflation like Germany but we've certainly had periods of high inflation. After Vietnam war we had it, but a money market account would pay 18% so it wasn't a total negative. Or if you were young you could take loans due to pay increases, and therefore eventually pay off loans.
1. tax revenues go up as people get back to work and wages rise
2. better economy leads to less wellfare and thus a reduction in gov't spending
And a third reason that isn't automatic
3. no need for stimulus therefore less temporary spending
We have inflation (2%) we also have no growth, we didn't ever as a country have hyperinflation like Germany but we've certainly had periods of high inflation. After Vietnam war we had it, but a money market account would pay 18% so it wasn't a total negative. Or if you were young you could take loans due to pay increases, and therefore eventually pay off those loans.
Oh what the hell Fox!? Seriously?
If the economy goes up the deficit goes down, agree. The debt is different and is at 16 trillion. We need surplus to reduce the debt.
Where are you getting no growth?
We have inflation (2%) we also have no growth, we didn't ever as a country have hyperinflation like Germany but we've certainly had periods of high inflation. After Vietnam war we had it, but a money market account would pay 18% so it wasn't a total negative. Or if you were young you could take loans due to pay increases, and therefore eventually pay off those loans.
Huh?
If the economy goes up the deficit goes down, agree. The debt is different and is at 16 trillion. We need surplus to reduce the debt.
No, we don't. We don't ever have to pay off the debt. In fact, we haven't in anyone's lifetime who is currently alive. The number is meaningless.
It's not no growth it's 1.5%, you're right, if we go over the cliff we would have no growth. The sequestration cuts would put us into negative growth.
It's not no growth it's 1.5%, you're right, if we go over the cliff we would have no growth. The sequestration cuts would put us into negative growth.
So, cuts would slow growth and even possibly put us in negative growth, but we have to do it because... ?
So, cuts would slow growth and even possibly put us in negative growth, but we have to do it because... ?
Actually, it's 2.13% through the first 3 quarters. 2%, 1.3%, and 3.1% each respective quarter. No official 4th quarter numbers released.
If China, India, Germany etc., want to collect on their bonds, and we have a huge deficit, we won't be able to pay them, while this won't happen in the short term it is more likely to happen as time goes on, money is just paper as we often discuss, if we only print, the paper has no value. I agree that spending is a good solution during recessionary periods, but it is not a permanent solution.
I don't want cuts. Stagflation I used incorrectly, I merely meant that we have little growth and inflation.
Fine, but we agree there are different estimates right?
We're always able to pay them and always will be. However none of them will ever ask for repayment in full, because those countries know better and know they really have no reason to ask for it back.
Right as long as China never collects, and we keep buying their goods, everything is fine. What people are saying is that there will never come a point a where people will stop trusting our ability to pay. And I just don't know how I feel about that. House Republicans suck bad.
Right as long as China never collects, and we keep buying their goods, everything is fine. What people are saying is that there will never come a point a where people will stop trusting our ability to pay. And I just don't know how I feel about that. House Republicans suck bad.
Why?We should work on reducing the deficit now, but the reason to put it off is because the drastic cuts needed, would kill the economy, so we need to put it off until the economy recovers and then strongly address it. When that will be, who the hell knows?
You are of course right, I was just trying to keep it short and simple, maybe I should've said increase in the money supply add to inflationary pressure.That's not true, though. Currency can only be devalued by its increase if the goods and services available for sale in the currency are held steady (or decrease). Likewise, even a constant supply of currency can become devalued if the goods and services offered for sale in the currency decrease (prices rise). A constant supply of currency can rise in value if the goods and services offered for sale in the currency increase (prices fall).
As well, if a currency is held steady and the population increases, the currency increases in value (less currency per users).
This is why the money supply must grow over time as an economy and population grow. Such growth in the supply does not devalue the money. Indeed, if it did not grow, the money would increase in value to intolerable levels (deflation).
It was not directly related to what I was trying to say, but it's a very important point that I wholeheartedly agree with.Economically powerful interests fear inflation because it devalues pools of money. Because economically powerful interests are also politically powerful, that fear of inflation results in a government that persistently under spends and keeps the economy throttled instead of optimized.
China never collects? Wtf are you taking about. Do you know how the bonds work?Right as long as China never collects, and we keep buying their goods, everything is fine. What people are saying is that there will never come a point a where people will stop trusting our ability to pay. And I just don't know how I feel about that. House Republicans suck bad.
http://www.politicususa.com/tim-huelskamp-convinced-sandy-victims-relief.html
Once again, everytime I think the GOP can't get worse....they always ALWAYS prove me horribly wrong.
Again, what do you think our budget deficit (or surplus) should be right now and why?
China never collects? Wtf are you taking about. Do you know how the bonds work?
T-bill contract doesn't allow the holder to do anything.As long as govt is paying interest, they can't ask for the money back, that's true, just like your mortgage example, even though some mortgage contracts do allow for banks to do that, but if you have a trillion dollars in one year bonds that's coming due and you receive back the trillion but don't buy more bonds, someone else has to buy it.
About 250 billion dollars annually. After four years, that would pay off 1/16th of the debt. So 64 years; out of debt.
So you would support removing 16 trillion dollars from our money supply and economy?
If it means more saving and investing yes.
I seldom get really pissed off at the stuff I read these days, but this one really tripped something in me.
I know he wasn't there to vote for Katrina relief. But god damn he should look around a bit and realize the affect those kind of votes can have on people's lives. These are not good people.
It would mean more saving but not more investing.If it means more saving and investing yes.
If it means more saving and investing yes.
It would mean more saving but not more investing.
Deflation creates a negative incentive to use your money, as whatever you were going to spend the money is going to be cheaper if you wait.
Saving is definitionally the opposite of investing -- you can't encourage both.
If it means more saving and investing yes.
I don't see deflation as that bad, it means your money is going up in value. Growth lately seems to create more wealth for the wealthy.
I don't see deflation as that bad, it means your money is going up in value. Growth lately seems to create more wealth for the wealthy.
Saving is definitionally the opposite of investing -- you can't encourage both.
If you remove $16 trillion of our money supply. how exactly is this going to lead to more investing?
Deflation is the worst. Do you understand what happens when your money always goes up in value? The ramifications are not pretty.
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sharia law
Seriously some cartoon villain shit. I don't even want to know how the vote is going to go for the rest of the relief with these clowns.
Here's a map of the vote stolen from SA:
Keith Ellison has been appointed as a Deputy Whip in the House Democratic caucus. Yes.
If it means more saving and investing yes.
When you build a bomb you're not creating capital, when you build a bulldozer you are creating something to move dirt and that's a capital investment which creates wealth. Take 500 billion out of military and spend it on high-speed rails around the country, that creates value.
Like Japan. I don't see why it has to go up or down all the time. Population growth is a problem we share with Japan (although theirs is way worse), but it's the size of California with a population that's half of the US, so maybe it's good that population is going down there.
You gotta be flipping kidding me. Not only did the rep for my hometown vote no, both the reps for where I live now and where I work voted no. I hate the midwest.
When you build a bomb you're not creating capital, when you build a bulldozer you are creating something to move dirt and that's a capital investment which creates wealth. Take 500 billion out of military and spend it on high-speed rails around the country, that creates value.
It would mean an endless depression. You can't have both the foreign sector (negative trade balance) and the government sector taking money from the private domestic sector. All running a government surplus accomplishes is making the domestic private sector run a deficit.
You can't have both the foreign sector (negative trade balance) and the government sector taking money from the private domestic sector.
I don't see what this has to do with removing $16 trillion in the money supply?
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sharia law
If we are at 5% unemployment, the gains in revenues and reduction in automatic welfare transfers + reduction in stimulus would greatly reduce our deficit. Add in the tax increases we just got (and some more we might get) and reduction in military expenditures coming regardless (no war) and our deficit will be very manageable in the coming future IF we can contain health care costs.
I don't like how all of Kansas was like LOLNO for any type of aid. Asshats.
Future Speaker? Yes please.
I don't think surplus is the greatest thing, it should be put in a reserve fund, and if we get to a certain level, we cut taxes and let people create their own wealth.
And I believe I read that Medicare spending has been going down over the last couple years too.