This is all so obvious. I don't understand why many on the left don't understand it. Originally Posted by Tinymany on the left are in fantasy land when it comes to real economics. they just refuse to deal with real world realities.
Top News Stories from 1962shouldn't the GDP be in 2020 dollars instead of 1998 dollars?
https://www.infoplease.com/year/1962
US GDP (1998 dollars): $585.2 billionPARTIAL defense. Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
Federal spending: $106.82 billion
Federal debt $302.9 billion
Consumer Price Index: $30.2
Unemployment: 6.7%
Cost of a first-class stamp: $0.04
All I know is that the rich keep getting richer and the poor keep getting poorer. Good day, sir. Originally Posted by eccieuser9500We hashed it out in this thread:
shouldn't the GDP be in 2020 dollars instead of 1998 dollars?Yes, growth in real (inflation adjusted) GDP per capita would be a better number to look at. I believe eccieuser's point is that the economy has grown a lot despite increasing government expenditures.
you'll need to clarify.. partial defense? Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
many on the left are in fantasy land when it comes to real economics. they just refuse to deal with real world realities.The article is from 1998. Yes, the GDP should be adjusted for today's worth.
shouldn't the GDP be in 2020 dollars instead of 1998 dollars?
you'll need to clarify.. partial defense? Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
The news comes just days after both United and American announced plans to furlough a combined 32,000 employees after lawmakers failed to agree on a broad pandemic relief package that includes more federal aid for the industry.
American Airlines CEO Doug Parker said 19,000 workers would be furloughed beginning last Thursday in a letter to staff after money from the CARES Act provided to airlines in the spring expired last Wednesday.
The financial flood is forecast to buoy net farm income — a USDA gauge of profitability — to $102.7 billion this year, the highest total since the end of the commodity boom in 2013. Subsidies are expected to equal 36% of farm income, the most since 41% in 2001, another era of stress. Most commodity prices tumbled with the outbreak of the pandemic, and the accompanying economic recession has throttled sales.
This one, sir. The corporate states of America.I believe at one time we were receiving less from tariffs on Chinese imports than we were spending on subsidies to compensate farmers for their losses from Chinese retaliation for those tariffs. And the tariffs weren't being paid by the Chinese, but rather by American importers, Walmart, and the like, and ultimately by the American consumer. The trade war on China was (is) a complete shit show.
American Airlines cuts 46% - or 86,000 - flights from its November schedule while United is forced to reduce its plan by 52% - days after the top US carriers furloughed a combined 32,000 employees
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-schedule.html
But farmers still get welfare checks. Needed. Because we need food. And he needs the votes.
HOW HIGH COULD FARM SUBSIDIES GO? $40 BILLION THIS YEAR.
https://www.agriculture.com/news/bus...lion-this-year Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
I believe at one time we were receiving less from tariffs on Chinese imports than we were spending on subsidies to compensate farmers for their losses from Chinese retaliation for those tariffs. And the tariffs weren't being paid by the Chinese, but rather by American importers, Walmart, and the like, and ultimately by the American consumer. The trade war on China was (is) a complete shit show.Thank you for your great post. Maybe their boards should cash out and all the other employees should apply at Spirit and JetBlue. Fire sale! I want a seven forty-seven before they go out of business.
In general, I don't like corporate welfare, whether it's being paid to airlines or agribusinesses or anybody else. I criticized Bush's and Obama's corporate and financial bailouts around the time of the 2008/2009 recession. But looking back, maybe it was worth it. The government got most, maybe all, of its investment back. And we saved businesses and jobs.
As to what to do about the airlines, if anything, that's above my paygrade. Airlines should be good businesses, as they may have no competition or just two or three companies competing on particular routes. When one raises its price the rest do too. But they go bankrupt all the time. Are United and American supposed to keep paying 80,000 workers and go bankrupt? That's not going to do anyone any good. Should the U.S. government step in and if so how? In 2008/2009 I thought I knew the answer and I didn't. So this time I'm not even going to venture a guess. Originally Posted by Tiny
Thank you for your great post. Maybe their boards should cash out and all the other employees should apply at Spirit and JetBlue. Fire sale! I want a seven forty-seven before they go out of business. Originally Posted by eccieuser9500No you don't. 747's are antiquated gas guzzlers.
No you don't. 747's are antiquated gas guzzlers.I'm not going to fly it! I'm going to live in it. In my new venture. A trailer park for plains.
You could have picked up a Boeing 787 Dreamliner from Mexico cheap if you'd been on the ball:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...y-wants-to-buy Originally Posted by Tiny