BigBallinStalin wrote:
The point is that you don't create wealth by simply transferring wealth from one group of people to another.
EXCEPT, that argument is only used for the bottom, who just don't have another alternative. Fact is, that it IS better to give people money to buy food, housing.. and that it DOES "trickle up" to the local economy by supporting grocers, landlords, etc, etc. This is particularly true when the economy is down.
The argument is quite a real reason to NOT give big businesses and wealthy individuals more tax breaks, force the rest of us to pay down debt caused to a large extent by bailing out the big guys, paying for wars to benefit the big guys... etc. The debt was NOT caused by AFDC or even current healthcare (it would be a big part if things kept on as they were... will stil be a big part if not altered).
ALSO, claiming that Social Security and Medicare are "taking to give to others" is not really true. AT least, not if the program hadn't been used as a big piggy bank from which to borrow. Even then, its more in the lines of paying now for benefits YOU will recieve in the future. Or, you could say you are paying back for the educational supports you recieved (even if you went to fully private schools) when you were younger.
Yeah, let's just pretend that the impacts of starvation, poor health, etc, etc don't matter. Becuase that is what is really at stake.. a few more dollars at the top, versus the basic well being of millions who happen to be at the bottom.BigBallinStalin wrote:Models for the multiplier effect state otherwise. If you experience windfalls in labor productivity, you can justify the increase in people's wages. Simply depositing money from their account through involuntary exchanges or from essentially printing the money doesn't result in the creation of wealth, and the means for doing so simply lead to further distortions in the price mechanism, thus the economy--but of course, Keynesian models fail to see this because their models simply don't consider it.
And again.. funny how all that seems to go out the wayside when it comes to the upper escheolon. THEY are the ones really getting benefit for no work or work not at all comminserate with their gain.
LOLBigBallinStalin wrote:Take the multiplier effect to its logical conclusion. If the government spent $4 trillion on tricycles, the economy's GDP would increase by over $4 trillion.
If you don't wish to make your stance look absurd, then consider what the monetary and fiscal policy of the past 4-5 years has been. According to their models, we should be booming right now, but we're not. Gee, "we didn't do enough; yeah, that must be the only possibility." Of course, without any standard of comparison, they'll never know, so they can continue engaging in the same irrational behavior of doing practically the same thing while expecting different results.
The past 4-5 years? REALLY? You want to consider the past 4 years as if that is some great economic trend??? Well, if you insist.... During Bush's last year, we saw a near banking collapse.. which by-the-way contributed significantly to the losses in Europe (far more than the social programs you wish to attack). In the past few years, the real income of average Americans has gone down, while the incomes of those at the top, including the very bankers who caused this big mess.. have gone way, way up.
The Stimulus? Well, most economists do agree it helped. While it has not instantly turned around the rolling train, it at least did avert a major train wreck. Instead, we have a bit of a bump... and now have to work to reverse things.
BigBallinStalin wrote:If you dump money into people's hands, then hey! that should get the economy going. Stimulate aggregate demand and investment would increase, and people would have more money to spend and... oh wait, that shit hardly happened.
Hmmm... well, now you are talking politics, not economics.
Michael Grunwald, senior correspondent for Time magazine, has written a new book detailing how that $800 billion package came to be. It's called "The New New Deal: The Hidden Story of Change in the Obama Era."
Grunwald says the stimulus plan did stimulate the economy: "Certainly all the objective economists who have looked at it, there is overwhelming consensus that it certainly did create jobs and it certainly did promote growth after a terrifying freefall."
And though he says that many of the stimulus programs are actually popular with the public, the idea of government spending continues to be a tough sell.
"It turn out that most of the actual things in the stimulus -- the tax cuts, infrastructure projects and the clean energy -- people actually like them, they just don't like the stimulus," says Grunwald. "There's a reason that even President Obama won't say the word any more and it really has become toxic. "
http://www.marketplace.org/topics/econo ... s-stimulus
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Why do you think the Federal Reserve is so opaque about its actual reports that inform the head guys on what to do? Because they would be a laughing stock if people could see how far off their predictions were. And there's been a pleasant mountain of $1.6 trillion of excess reserves sitting at the fed's bank accounts while people are shifting to investments in riskier financial assets. Yes, but please go on about the marginal propensity to consume and the multiplier effect! The economy has been booming from the insights of that school of economics.
The fed has promoted lowering interest rates. THAT part has failed. The stimulus.. not so much.











































































