Are the trillion dollar projected deficits 10 years from now under Obama's budget Keynesian as well?![]()
That is a projection, not a plan. The WH is not planning on having trillion dollar deficits 10 years from now.
Are the trillion dollar projected deficits 10 years from now under Obama's budget Keynesian as well?![]()
He promised that his trillion dollar stimulus program would prevent unemployment from exceeding 8%. Yet here we are today with unemployment of over 9.5% (on average nationally). What went wrong?
Maybe we'd have only seen a max of 9% and the economy would already be well on it's way to recovery (because industry wouldn't have delayed actions needed to recover, hoping to get a good deal from the government's largess)?
Government is building inefficiencies into our economy in much the same way government has built inefficiencies into it's own operations and in the trillion dollar programs it controls.
Both of you miss the point. As the CBO reports, new Obama spending programs will increase the national debt more than $6 trillion dollars over what it would have been had existing law, when Obama entered office, just remained in effect. Obama's efforts will DOUBLE the national debt over what it was when Bush left office. He didn't inherit that. Somehow, debt under Bush was bad but equal debt under Obama is good. I'm just puzzled by the inconsistency in this logic. A topic many here seem to want to avoid.![]()
That is a projection, not a plan. The WH is not planning on having trillion dollar deficits 10 years from now.
Which means what? That we have to do what democrats want regardless of what history shows? Sorry, but at this time our proper job is to make sure this President accomplishes as little of his agenda as possible. Otherwise, we will be saddled with programs just as expensive and just as ineffective as the War On Poverty, War on Drugs, Public Education, Medicare and Medicaid. Programs that will probably bankrupt the country for sure. *snipped to save space* This is top level stuff, sugarb.
Now, don't be making things up. It's just about mathematically impossible to not project a trillion dollar deficit 10 years from now.That is a projection, not a plan. The WH is not planning on having trillion dollar deficits 10 years from now.
Let's look at the real story rather than your revisionism. I suggest everyone read this article (I've merely quoted the introduction and conclusions):
http://www.heritage.org/research/taxes/wm1835.cfm
Because spending money for social programs in the U.S. helps our economy and helps the citizens of the U.S. Spending money on an unnecessary war in Iraq does not.
I'm not sure that I have the space or time here to explain to you how our entire society functions.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
I just know that after spending 10 trillion dollars over the last 40-45 years on welfare programs (that could have been allocated directly to economic growth instead), the number of poor people in the US is just as large as it was 45 years ago.
You have some evidence of that? Looking at this chart it appears that the poverty rate declined or stayed steady from 1965 to about 1980 except for a couple small upticks during recessions. By the end of the Reagan and Bush administrations it was almost up to where it was in 1965 and then it started to fall again around 1993 and rise again in 2000.
The "capitalism alone" phase of poverty reduction can be seen operating from 1950 to 1966. In that period the poverty rate (column H) fell from 30% to 15%. Even poverty in the non-white population (column I) fell from almost 60% in 1960 to 40% by 1966. ... snip ... What attends the striking increase in anti-poverty activity is the actual slowing and halting of the fall in the poverty rate. The percentage of the population below the poverty line bottoms out in 1973 at 11.1% and then stagnates or increases from then on. By 1981, only the first year of the Reagan Presidency, the poverty rate is already back up to 14%, where it hadn't been since 1967. At the same time, the percentage of families on AFDC had skyrocketed, from the disturbing 2% of 1963 to what must be the even more disturbing, or shocking, 6.5% of 1980. Programs intended to reduce "dependency" had instead more than tripled it. ... snip ... It is also noteworthy that the general availability of abortion, often presented as necessary for the alleviation of poverty, in fact coincided, after the Roe v. Wade decision, with the period when poverty ceased to decline and began to increase again.
The poverty rate among black families fell from 87 percent in 1940 to 47 percent in 1960, during an era of virtually no major civil rights legislation or anti-poverty programs. It dropped another 17 percentage points during the decade of the 1960s and one percentage point during the 1970s, but this continuation of the previous trend was neither unprecedented nor something to be arbitrarily attributed to the programs like the War on Poverty.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
Indeed, prior to the enactment of Johnson's War On Poverty programs, and all those that followed them, the unemployment rate was dropping dramatically.
And it continued to do so until the recession of 1970 and the election of Nixon.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
What benefit is there to creating a stable, prosperous arab democracy in the middle east ... What benefit is there to creating a democracy that is willing to help us fight terrorism in the region and keep terrorists from using that country and it's oil as a resource?
To turn your own question back on you "Perhaps there is some benefit, but can you quantify it in any way?" What evidence is there that a stable prosperous Arab democracy has been created in the middle east?
TThe WH is not planning on having trillion dollar deficits 10 years from now.
You've simply missed my point. I suggest you read my last post to psychictv. The issue is why war debt is bad but welfare debt is good. The CBO projected an increase in national debt over the next 10 years, due to changes that Obama made, of nearly twice the total long term projected cost of the Iraq War (by anti-war liberals). Why isn't that increase in debt bad?
But how do you know that Obama's policies didn't make things worse ... as many economists suggested beforehand they would? In selling the stimulus, his own people projected a maximum unemployment rate of 9% IF WE DID NOTHING. He promised that his trillion dollar stimulus program would prevent unemployment from exceeding 8%. Yet here we are today with unemployment of over 9.5% (on average nationally). What went wrong? How do we know that had we done nothing his economists wouldn't have been right? Maybe we'd have only seen a max of 9% and the economy would already be well on it's way to recovery (because industry wouldn't have delayed actions needed to recover, hoping to get a good deal from the government's largess)? What you folks don't seem to understand is that recessions serve a purpose. They help economies eliminate inefficiencies and waste. But government interference is preventing that. Government is building inefficiencies into our economy in much the same way government has built inefficiencies into it's own operations and in the trillion dollar programs it controls. And those inefficiencies will make us all poorer that we would have been if government had just kept it's hands off OUR MONEY and let the capitalist and free market mechanisms work.
Do you even know what the stimulus program is? It has barely even gone into effect yet.
What sort of actions can private industry take to stimulate the economy?
I never said debt under Obama was good.
I'm just saying that both Republicans AND Democrats are contributing to this problem. And it wasn't just Bush or Obama either. All of Congress is to blame as well.
But rather than derail this thread into a discussion of that, let's just focus on your first claim.
What you are really implying, however, is that money devoted to social programs helps our economy more than allocating that same money by other means ... more than just letting the free market operate.
I say that if we had devoted that 10 trillion dollars we spent on the WOP over the last 45 years to other things, our economy would be stronger than it is now and poverty rates would be lower than now.
I say the disincentives to personal responsibility and betterment that are implicit in welfare programs are harmful. I say they create a welfare *mentality* that becomes the status quo ... the ACCEPTED norm.
And the national debt associated with such unrestrained, long term social spending as this country has endured has a cost ... a cost that welfare proponents (and recipients) simply want to ignore. That cost has to do with sustainability, and sooner or later that bill will come due. In the form of inflation, if nothing worse.
It really comes down to what mechanisms exist for deciding what is smart spending as opposed to dumb spending. The free market (if left alone) has mechanisms (including recessions) for encouraging smart spending ... for encouraging growth which in the end is the only thing that will make us all wealthier.
Like I say, there are mechanisms and forces that encourage dumb decision making in government. And no mechanisms to really punish those who make such decisions.
One can almost guarantee that neither Obama or any Congresscritter will suffer any financial impact if their decisions turn out wrong. They won't even get sued ... because unlike the CEOs of private companies we can't sue them.
Private companies go out business when they aren't successful, long before they can impoverish a country.
Just that when it comes to trillion dollar federal programs, we best be careful because those programs haven't really worked very well. It is hard to find success stories. Can you name any?
Your wikipedia source chart shows that the "number in poverty" in 1964 (about 33 million) is less than the "number in poverty" now (about 37 million).
To turn your question back on you, is there any evidence that the goals of Obama's spending programs (or the WOP, WOD, Medicare, Public Education) have been met? That what has been achieved is anywhere near worth the cost?
LOL! Do you even know how the private economy works?![]()
>>>.Tax Cuts, Not the Clinton Tax Hike, Produced the 1990s Boom
How incredibly, amazingly, stupid.
So here's a question. At the end of Clinton's term, were taxes higher, or lower? Oh, they were higher? I thought so.
So, the best way to stimulate the economy is to raise taxes, and then cut them, but not as much as you raised them in the first place. What could be simpler?
What a bunch of codswallop.
So you're comfortably middle class then. Not poor enough to need help but not rich enough to buy influence in Washington. Welcome to the club.![]()
I don't like how much stalling there is in our government, due to partisanship, and I think that stalling has as much to do with the crises we're experiencing (mortgages, health care, etc) as anything.
I seem to recall quite vividly that Gingrich also steered the Republican party toward supporting some of Clinton's goals as well.
In fact, I recall some hard core Republicans thinking Gingrich was, at times, a traitor.
I will say this: it seems to me that the Clinton administration really did a number on our intelligence community...and not in a way that led to improvements.
Third point, Bush. You think Bush tried to appease the Democrats and added more funding to failed/failing programs. I don't agree that Bush tried to appease Democrats. Not at all.
I *do* agree that he was a fiscal nightmare...not at all a conservative
In my opinion, the biggest difference between Clinton and Bush was that Clinton tried to govern and Bush was just playing politics.
Bush relied too heavily on advisers
I really don't think he was the best (or even close to the top) of what Republicans had to offer.
You are right, Bush absolutely ignored the things that were leading to these crises
...but BeAChooser? He also did more than that, if you'll recall. His best advice for our economy? "Go out and SPEND! Spend money you don't have, and everything will be OKAY!"
I mean, be honest...how long did it take you to realize that Bush was completely incapable of understanding basic economics?
So, if government is considering, and is capable, of a program that will save people money? Lots and LOTS of money? Then yeah, I'm going to support it,
one thing I do know is that, no matter how "brilliant" a person is, no one person could adequately, alone, handle all of the issues, understand all of the issues, construct solutions to all of the issues, a country as big as ours faces.
I don't see our major parties as all that different anymore, so I've kind of stopped noticing the -D or -R after the names. And again, maybe that's wrong.
But you know, even you yourself said (I think it was you anyway...correct me if I'm wrong) that the programs initially implemented to boost the economy after the Depression were working, but we didn't stick to them, instead adding more and more and more "welfare" programs.