Anyone else feeling more optimistic than me? I could sure use some cheering up.
Originally Posted by Lust4xxxLife
Sorry, but no.
My belief is that we are in far more trouble than most people realize. I think today's blowoff has not so much to do with the S&P downgrade
per se, but rather with the fact that it's beginning to settle in on people's consciousness that the current collection of political grandstanders in charge of our government asylum have no intention of doing anything about the crux of the problem.
At the same time, Panetta is saying we should raise taxes to avoid cuts to the military. WTF? What a moron. We should cut the military in half and retool it for modern challenges, in my opinion.
Originally Posted by Lust4xxxLife
Wow, Lust4xxxLife! That's perhaps the most aggressive proposal I've heard, even going beyond Barney Frank and Ron Paul territory.
However...I'm not sure I disagree.
I have a good friend from my boyhood days who's a retired Navy Admiral. Like me, he's pretty conservative (in a libertarian way) and a strong believer in robust national defense. But he says the amount of waste, largely on systems designed to fight potential enemies such as the defunct Soviet Union, is simply unbelievable. And why do we have tens of thousands of troops still in places like South Korea and Western Europe? South Korea is a wealthy nation now; it can afford to pay for its defense. And the Russians aren't very likely to start rolling tanks across the European plain, as far as I can tell.
Obama's stimulus plan showed little results for the amounts we put in.
Originally Posted by cookie man
First, the stimulus was what kept us from having a second depression. Second, it was poorly designed in a foolish effort to attract Republican support. Therefore much of it was wasted on unproductive tax cuts. Had it been all stimulus instead of tax giveaways, and had it been about 50% larger as the data suggested it needed to be, we might well be out of the woods now.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Sorry TushHog, but Cookie Man is exactly right. The notion that the "stimulus" kept us from having a second Great Depression is simply ludicrous. It wasn't even designed to be an economic stimulus; hacks in congress simply rewarded favored constituencies. Just break it down into its component parts and take a reasoned look at it and you'll see what I mean.
And arguments intended to undergird support for the stimulus package rest on thoroughly discredited economic doctrine. Big increases in government spending act as economic
retardants, not stimulants. History is quite clear on that. We will be paying for this (along with all the other economic malfeasance of the last ten years) for a long time to come.
About the best face you can put on the squadered $860 billion "stimulus" package of 2009 is that it probably made the economy a little less bad in 2009 than it otherwise would have been, since you can't toss around that much money, no matter how wastefully or ineffectively you do it, without doing a little good somewhere. But at what cost?
One more note for students of economics: It's really inappropriate to refer to this as "Keynesianism." In fact, it should be considered a bald-faced affront to John Maynard Keynes, who
never recommended adding massive new levels of deficit spending on top of already-large structural budget deficits. Remember, when he did his work in the 1930s, advanced economies generally ran budgets that were in near-balance or even surplus in good times, so that a little "countercyclical kick" wouldn't get you very far out of balance. That clearly is not the case today, and that's why the stimulus package is a large net negative for the U.S. economy.
You can't cure the aftermath of the bust following a debt-fueled consumption boom by injecting more of the same bad medicine that got you there in the first place. That's essentially what we've been trying to do. It will not work and it cannot work.
The problem is that getting anywhere near balance is going to be a very, very painful process. There isn't the slightest chance that we'll cut spending by more than token amounts in little places here and there. The political process just will not allow it. We've made political promises we cannot afford to keep without huge tax increases that will slow the economy for years to come.
In my opinion, we already had structural budget deficits in at least the $500 billion range by 2007. The only reason the headline number was smaller than that was that tax revenue to the Treasury received a big boost for several years as a result of the debt-fueled consumption boom of the '00s (including the housing bubble). Since then we've added hundreds of billions of new annual spending, some of it on autopilot (Medicare, etc.) but much of it dues to gross fiscal recklessness.
In my view, all of this means that serious economic difficulties are already baked into the pie. If we don't narrow the deficits, we'll see crises that will make the panic of 2008 look like a pleasant 4th of July family picnic by comparison. Narrowing the deficits with tax increases would suck about a trillion bucks a year out of our consumer-driven economy.
This only touches the surface and covers an issue or two, while there are so many things
structurally wrong.
But I'll wrap this up with one simple thought:
We need less debt-fueled consumption and more savings, investment, production, and exports.
If we don't make some pretty good progress toward getting there, we'll never fully recover.