Huh? You mean A didn't solely, entirely and exclusively cause 100% of B to happen? You're saying C, D, and E also contributed to B? And some of those variables influenced B in opposite ways? So now I have to figure out what the impact of A on B would have been, but for C and D's offsetting effects? Awww... go away with that complicated shit! It muddies up my narrative!
Originally Posted by lustylad
Most of us here, including me, are guilty of what LustyLad's describing. A few observations from the past,
Venezuelan YoY GDP growth from 2004 through 2007 ranged from 7.7% to 36%. Actually Hugo Chavez and others in the Venezuelan government must have looked like economic geniuses up until Chavez's death in March, 2013 -- GDP growth in 2012 was 5.5%.
What happened after that? Venezuela is now a complete basket case. It has the worst economy in the Western Hemisphere except possibly for Haiti and Cuba.
President Clinton was president during a huge run up in tech stocks. The NASDAQ index peaked at over 5000 in March, 2000. By the time Clinton left office, the index had roughly halved.
George W. Bush was president when the S&P 500 hit a record, around 1560, in October, 2007. By the time he left office the index had fallen to around half that level.
Now, it is fair to blame Chavez and his fellow party members for the state of the Venezuelan economy. They've been in charge since 1998. And the nationalization of businesses and discouragement of capitalism obviously led to the country's demise. It's fair to make that observation after 24 years of history.
Looking back, would it have been fair in 2013 at Hugo's funeral to laud and credit him for world beating GDP growth during his time in power? Of course not. Maybe steadily rising oil prices, but not Hugo.
Can you give Clinton or Bush the credit for the run ups or fall offs in market indices? I don't think so. They were just there when it happened.
How about Obama and Trump and GDP growth? I'd come down on LustyLad's side on this, that two years of Republican rule in 2017/2018 had a more favorable effect on GDP than Democratic rule from 2009/2010. Those were years when one party controlled the presidency, the House and the Senate. But other variables collectively influenced GDP growth more than who was in power. And WTF has a good point, both parties have run up our debt to what may be unsustainable levels.
And that's what most of us do agree on, is that we don't like huge budget deficits and debt levels. The argument I guess is do you try to fix that by lowering the rate of growth of government expenditures or increasing the rate of growth of government revenues.
Instead of looking at U.S. GDP growth over periods of time, a better approach is to look at GDP per capita, adjusted for purchasing power, by country. As I've said countless times here, when you kick out the petrostates like Norway and the tiny places like Monaco, the countries with the highest GDP per capita are Singapore, the USA, Ireland, Switzerland, and Hong Kong. And these same countries have the lowest government expenditures and government revenues as a % of GDP of medium and large developed countries. You can spend some time with Wikipedia tables and verify that, although you may have to use something like the Wayback Machine (internet archive) as COVID has obscured the numbers, especially government expenditures for the USA which were abnormally high in 2020 and 2021. I'll put some links at the bottom.
Anyway, this leads me to believe the better way to fix the budget deficits and debt is through lower growth in spending. And more efficiency in spending and programs would help a whole bunch, which is something that I'm not sure our federal government is capable of. The municipalities and states are much better at that.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_o...PP)_per_capita
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_o...centage_of_GDP