Well, you've said how he did it (not flashy, bi-partisan) and named his Secretary of the Treasury, but you still haven't said what he did. The unemployment down and surplus up are results, not tactics, right?Clinton did a lot of middle of the road things that were not flashy, but produced results. He kept unemployment down, the surplus up and used a bi-partisan approach that inspired a lot of confidence on Wall Street. Robert Rubin (Republican who served as Clinton's Secretary of the Treasury) is an example, the street loved him.
I've never gotten a good answer on this... what is it that a president does that is so crucial to the economy? I mean, budget and tax cuts have to figure in to it, but how? People are saying Bush's tax cuts aren't a good idea, and I have to agree given the deficit, but nobody seems to have numbers, or specifics, or much of anything. Damnit Jim, I'm an engineer, not an economist... is there any way to explain the differences of economic policy in a way that is both meaningful and not excessively complex? I don't want to go through the budget line by line, but I'd like some more info on this if anyone feels up to the task.
Just as a quick responses to the other ones (keep in mind I'm a total amateur here):
1) government agencies budgets normally increase on a yearly basis for inflation and such, right? If their budgets were planning on this and tax revenue does not increase then there's a net debt, right?
2) Did not Goldman Sachs (sp?) and the rest of wallstreet have vastly profitable years during the 90s? I'd assume they have to pay taxes on that, regardless of how many tax shelters they manage to hide money in. I assume the tech companies (before they went under) were paying taxes. While vast sums of money vanished into thin air, up until companies started filing for bankruptcy they were still paying taxes, right? I assume the govt lost a large amount of income when the market went belly up and suddenly lots of dotcom "millionaires" went broke, but up until then they would seem to have benefited from portions of it (though not the stock options, if I understand correctlly).
Anyway, anybody got an good sources on where to learn about this that don't involve the same old partisan bickering?
Edit: and cr*p, I wasted my 1000th post on this? Should have posted in G6's b-day thread... that would have at least won me some suck-up points