K
Kitty Sinatra
I've always taken that phrase to mean "too big to allow to fail."Just like not breaking up the "too big to fail" banks now that they can..
I've always taken that phrase to mean "too big to allow to fail."Just like not breaking up the "too big to fail" banks now that they can..
You got some links showing this supposed "recovery?" And here's a hint - the 5% increase in GDP doesn't count. Productivity is not really increasing. It only seems like it's increasing because employers used the recession as an excuse to fire everyone on the payroll who was useless. With fewer employees on the payroll and with sales up, productivity artificially appears to be up. However, this is an artificial increase. And in order for inventories to continue to be rebuilt, employees will have to be rehired, because productivity is simply not this good. And with all the huge tax increases in Obama's proposed 2011 budget, and with the uncertainty of cap and trade looming in the future, businesses are still keeping the hatches battened down.Ok, first off, anyone who believed the bailouts where meant to make the crisis go away as if by bloody magic, pls stop talking...especially since most economies are in recovery (jobless as it may be).
We stand, in fact, an excellent chance of heading into a double dip recession here.\\"Fourth (and quoting David): \\"... if you believe the GDP data -- remember, there are more revisions to come -- then you de facto must be of the view that productivity growth is soaring at over a 6% annual rate. No doubt productivity is rising -- just look at the never-ending slate of layoff announcements. But we came off a cycle with no technological advance and no capital deepening, so it is hard to believe that productivity at this time is growing at a pace that is four times the historical norm. Sorry, but we're not buyers of that view. In the fourth quarter, aggregate private hours worked contracted at a 0.5% annual rate and what we can tell you is that such a decline in labor input has never before, scanning over 50 years of data, coincided with a GDP headline this good. \\"Normally, GDP growth is 1.7% when hours worked is this weak, and that is exactly the trend that was depicted this week in the release of the Chicago Fed's National Activity Index, which was widely ignored. On the flip side, when we have in the past seen GDP growth come in at or near a 5.7% annual rate, what is typical is that hours worked grows at a 3.7% rate. No matter how you slice it, the GDP number today represented not just a rare but an unprecedented event, and as such, we are willing to treat the report with an entire saltshaker -- a few grains won't do.\\"
I'm... not sure what you're asking me to prove here. That alternative proposals exist? That it's possible to come up with another option to improve the health care industry besides the 1000+ pages of untested ideas that congress is putting together?Wow, it's almost like i chose the word nothing on purpose... crazy, right?I agree that something should be done about healthcare, but saying that, by proxy, this massive experiment needs to be passed is fallacy.
A specific fallacy called the Politician's Syllogism, in fact.
But show me an alternative that doesn't amount to "let the market deal with it, it worked so well so far" and i'll believe you.
I'm... not sure what you're asking me to prove here. That alternative proposals exist? That it's possible to come up with another option to improve the health care industry besides the 1000+ pages of untested ideas that congress is putting together?[/QUOTE]Wow, it's almost like i chose the word nothing on purpose... crazy, right?I agree that something should be done about healthcare, but saying that, by proxy, this massive experiment needs to be passed is fallacy.
A specific fallacy called the Politician's Syllogism, in fact.
But show me an alternative that doesn't amount to "let the market deal with it, it worked so well so far" and i'll believe you.
I'm... not sure what you're asking me to prove here. That alternative proposals exist? That it's possible to come up with another option to improve the health care industry besides the 1000+ pages of untested ideas that congress is putting together?[/QUOTE]Wow, it's almost like i chose the word nothing on purpose... crazy, right?I agree that something should be done about healthcare, but saying that, by proxy, this massive experiment needs to be passed is fallacy.
A specific fallacy called the Politician's Syllogism, in fact.
But show me an alternative that doesn't amount to "let the market deal with it, it worked so well so far" and i'll believe you.
Here's an article going into details about the Obama 2011 budget's tax hikes.After reading a couple of links all I see is things like \"huge/massive tax increase\" but it never says where (I'm assuming: income tax?) and how much. Or maybe I just seem to miss it. Can anyone tell me, cause I've gotten a bit curious.
Here's an article going into details about the Obama 2011 budget's tax hikes.[/QUOTE]After reading a couple of links all I see is things like \\"huge/massive tax increase\\" but it never says where (I'm assuming: income tax?) and how much. Or maybe I just seem to miss it. Can anyone tell me, cause I've gotten a bit curious.
Here's an article going into details about the Obama 2011 budget's tax hikes.[/QUOTE]After reading a couple of links all I see is things like \\\"huge/massive tax increase\\\" but it never says where (I'm assuming: income tax?) and how much. Or maybe I just seem to miss it. Can anyone tell me, cause I've gotten a bit curious.
Well, it is a tax on the dead. After they die.Nice article, but it does gloss over a few things. It's not "Taxes all around". It's taxes on the wealthy, estate taxes (which is labeled as The Death Tax to scare people), and big businesses. The plan for job stimulation isn't at a corporate level (which has been decreasing jobs by sending them overseas where it is cheaper to produce), but at the small business/construction level.Chibibar;337386 said:ouch....... it is painful all around.GasBandit;337378 said:Here's an article going into details about the Obama 2011 budget's tax hikes.After reading a couple of links all I see is things like \\\\\"huge/massive tax increase\\\\\" but it never says where (I'm assuming: income tax?) and how much. Or maybe I just seem to miss it. Can anyone tell me, cause I've gotten a bit curious.
But if you give up, they win! All arguments boil down to making the other person think that pushing their point of view isn't worth the effort.I'm not even going to get into the healthcare part. I've become exhausted listening to arguments against reforming healthcare.
Well, it is a tax on the dead. After they die.Nice article, but it does gloss over a few things. It's not "Taxes all around". It's taxes on the wealthy, estate taxes (which is labeled as The Death Tax to scare people), and big businesses. The plan for job stimulation isn't at a corporate level (which has been decreasing jobs by sending them overseas where it is cheaper to produce), but at the small business/construction level.Chibibar;337386 said:ouch....... it is painful all around.GasBandit;337378 said:Here's an article going into details about the Obama 2011 budget's tax hikes.After reading a couple of links all I see is things like \\\\\\"huge/massive tax increase\\\\\\" but it never says where (I'm assuming: income tax?) and how much. Or maybe I just seem to miss it. Can anyone tell me, cause I've gotten a bit curious.
But if you give up, they win! All arguments boil down to making the other person think that pushing their point of view isn't worth the effort.I'm not even going to get into the healthcare part. I've become exhausted listening to arguments against reforming healthcare.
I've been successful in this thread so far.You can NEVER ignore my ENTIRE entirety.
Heh. I will debate argument means usually only 1 person wins. I like debate. There are plenty of times my views are changed due to people actually listing valid supporting statement/links (it is internet after all)I'm not a successful arguer. I'm more interested in what is achievable than who can push their point the longest.
I've always taken that phrase to mean "too big to allow to fail."[/QUOTE]Just like not breaking up the "too big to fail" banks now that they can..
Oh noes, it haz 1k pages, tl:dr so it must be bad.That alternative proposals exist? That it's possible to come up with another option to improve the health care industry besides the 1000+ pages of untested ideas that congress is putting together?
That's my take on it too. Heck, I wouldn't necessarily mind a huge overhaul of the healthcare system if it was done slowly over time, so that all the unexpected kinks that will show up from the different proposals could be worked out as they show their heads, instead of piling on top of each other all at once, which is what would probably happen with the current proposal.
Of course, it doesn't look like the slow approach would work with what the democrats are planning, either. For instance, their plan for getting rid of the "preexisting conditions" thing would only work if they forced everyone to get healthcare, since otherwise it would have been too expensive of a change for insurance companies to handle. Same with pretty much everything else in the bill, from how I understand it.
No, I'm serious. I want to know who is telling you that we're in a recovery. I know the Obama administration keeps talking about how we're recovering, but we're not, and I've provided links to show it.@GB
How about the fact that there's economic growth in most countries hit by the recession and there are still enough companies around to hire people some time in the future...
What?!?! You didn't even try to look that up, did you? The heading "Where do the statistics come from" is where you want to look.Now everything's in the shitter and we're in a recovery despite 10% unemployment (which is estimated to be closer to 20% in actuality, it's just some people have given up looking, and looking for work is how the unemployment rate is calculated).
What?!?! You didn't even try to look that up, did you? The heading "Where do the statistics come from" is where you want to look.Now everything's in the shitter and we're in a recovery despite 10% unemployment (which is estimated to be closer to 20% in actuality, it's just some people have given up looking, and looking for work is how the unemployment rate is calculated).
What?!?! You didn't even try to look that up, did you? The heading "Where do the statistics come from" is where you want to look.Now everything's in the shitter and we're in a recovery despite 10% unemployment (which is estimated to be closer to 20% in actuality, it's just some people have given up looking, and looking for work is how the unemployment rate is calculated).
What?!?! You didn't even try to look that up, did you? The heading "Where do the statistics come from" is where you want to look.Now everything's in the shitter and we're in a recovery despite 10% unemployment (which is estimated to be closer to 20% in actuality, it's just some people have given up looking, and looking for work is how the unemployment rate is calculated).
No, I'm serious. I want to know who is telling you that we're in a recovery. I know the Obama administration keeps talking about how we're recovering, but we're not, and I've provided links to show it.@GB
How about the fact that there's economic growth in most countries hit by the recession and there are still enough companies around to hire people some time in the future...
No, I'm serious. I want to know who is telling you that we're in a recovery. I know the Obama administration keeps talking about how we're recovering, but we're not, and I've provided links to show it.@GB
How about the fact that there's economic growth in most countries hit by the recession and there are still enough companies around to hire people some time in the future...
No, I'm serious. I want to know who is telling you that we're in a recovery. I know the Obama administration keeps talking about how we're recovering, but we're not, and I've provided links to show it.@GB
How about the fact that there's economic growth in most countries hit by the recession and there are still enough companies around to hire people some time in the future...
No, I'm serious. I want to know who is telling you that we're in a recovery. I know the Obama administration keeps talking about how we're recovering, but we're not, and I've provided links to show it.@GB
How about the fact that there's economic growth in most countries hit by the recession and there are still enough companies around to hire people some time in the future...
Let's not underestimate the level of stupidity on everyone's part on investing/emulating into all those screwy things the US banks where doing...It was the US market crash that yanked down everybody else, and the problem is not fixed here yet - our politicians haven't learned anything.
I don't have data for the European countries, but economists on both sides of the aisle here in America agree that the recent growth of our GDP is entirely artificial, owing less to stimulus money and more to how GDP is calculated. Much like kicking the kids with the worst grades out of a school artificially increases test scores, so has our GDP gone up 5% from the least productive workers being fired. The takehome here is that we're nowhere NEAR out of the woods, and at least in America, businesses still are too busy trying to clench their cheeks together in the face of Obama's ever-increasing hostility toward the private sector to rehire or expand. Plus, we just raised our debt ceiling over 14 trillion dollars. This is not a formula for recovery.The word you're looking for is IF.
He says that the growth we're seeing now is because of the money spent, and that the next question is if without the money will there still be growth (but slower because there's no more, or less, stimulus money) or will it go down into the negative again.
That's just it... a large part of the world economy is investing in the US economy, even now, after what should have been a giant wake-up call. But I guess political myopia isn't limited to one culture.Let's not underestimate the level of stupidity on everyone's part on investing/emulating into all those screwy things the US banks where doing...It was the US market crash that yanked down everybody else, and the problem is not fixed here yet - our politicians haven't learned anything.
I don't have data for the European countries, but economists on both sides of the aisle here in America agree that the recent growth of our GDP is entirely artificial, owing less to stimulus money and more to how GDP is calculated. Much like kicking the kids with the worst grades out of a school artificially increases test scores, so has our GDP gone up 5% from the least productive workers being fired. The takehome here is that we're nowhere NEAR out of the woods, and at least in America, businesses still are too busy trying to clench their cheeks together in the face of Obama's ever-increasing hostility toward the private sector to rehire or expand. Plus, we just raised our debt ceiling over 14 trillion dollars. This is not a formula for recovery.The word you're looking for is IF.
He says that the growth we're seeing now is because of the money spent, and that the next question is if without the money will there still be growth (but slower because there's no more, or less, stimulus money) or will it go down into the negative again.
That's just it... a large part of the world economy is investing in the US economy, even now, after what should have been a giant wake-up call. But I guess political myopia isn't limited to one culture.[/QUOTE]Let's not underestimate the level of stupidity on everyone's part on investing/emulating into all those screwy things the US banks where doing...It was the US market crash that yanked down everybody else, and the problem is not fixed here yet - our politicians haven't learned anything.
I don't have data for the European countries, but economists on both sides of the aisle here in America agree that the recent growth of our GDP is entirely artificial, owing less to stimulus money and more to how GDP is calculated. Much like kicking the kids with the worst grades out of a school artificially increases test scores, so has our GDP gone up 5% from the least productive workers being fired. The takehome here is that we're nowhere NEAR out of the woods, and at least in America, businesses still are too busy trying to clench their cheeks together in the face of Obama's ever-increasing hostility toward the private sector to rehire or expand. Plus, we just raised our debt ceiling over 14 trillion dollars. This is not a formula for recovery.[/QUOTE]The word you're looking for is IF.
He says that the growth we're seeing now is because of the money spent, and that the next question is if without the money will there still be growth (but slower because there's no more, or less, stimulus money) or will it go down into the negative again.
You do realise that you guys would be even worse off without the rest of the world investing in you, right?That's just it... a large part of the world economy is investing in the US economy, even now, after what should have been a giant wake-up call. But I guess political myopia isn't limited to one culture.Let's not underestimate the level of stupidity on everyone's part on investing/emulating into all those screwy things the US banks where doing...It was the US market crash that yanked down everybody else, and the problem is not fixed here yet - our politicians haven't learned anything.
Well, that's not exactly what is happening. Because the least productive workers are fired first, overall productivity looks like it is going up because the ratio of production to expenses goes up, even though production itself may not be going up at all. Here's how Economist James Altucher puts it:Ok, in what way is your GDP calculated that it manages to ignore people that where fired?!
You just reasoned your way around to agreeing with me. Congratulations.You sure it's not just that getting rid of those people made the businesses more efficient, which lead to better relative performances, but also a jobless recovery... and once you have all those consumers without money to buy stuff the modern economic system is in trouble, which could easily lead to a double dip, as no customers, no sales...
Of course. My point was not that I wanted other countries to stop investing, I was merely pointing out that the economy of the world is invested in the economy of the United States, which is most likely about to screw everybody again.You do realise that you guys would be even worse off without the rest of the world investing in you, right?
How we're doing in july will depend entirely upon what actions are taken between now and then, and how they make private sector business owners feel about the way the future is going to work out. If democrats decide, as they have mumbled about doing, to extend the bush tax cuts, and if they decide to pare back on Obama's obscenely bloated 2011 budget, we may see some modest improvements. If they instead decide to keep beating the health care dead horse and then double down by throwing cap and trade into the mix, things may look less rosy.You know, how about we all just take bets and shut up about it.
We make a bet about how some aspect of the economy will have fared by, say, July of this year. The winners will be treated to free Halforums mugs by the losers.
Then, when an argument about the economy comes up in the future, the winners can just show a picture of themselves with the mug, and we will all know that we're standing in the presence of a superior economic forecaster.
Fewer employees would affect profits, not productivity... and sales being up can't be at the base of an artificial increase...Well, that's not exactly what is happening. Because the least productive workers are fired first, overall productivity looks like it is going up because the ratio of production to expenses goes up, even though production itself may not be going up at all. Here's how Economist James Altucher puts it:Ok, in what way is your GDP calculated that it manages to ignore people that where fired?!
"Productivity is not really increasing. It only seems like it's increasing because employers used the recession as an excuse to fire everyone on the payroll who was useless. With fewer employees on the payroll and with sales up, productivity artificially appears to be up. However, Rosenberg (and Mauldin) are correct: This is an artificial increase. And in order for inventories to continue to be rebuilt employees will have to be rehired, because productivity is simply not this good."
No, i was saying your conclusions might be correct, but the logic you used is flawed... or at least badly worded...You just reasoned your way around to agreeing with me. Congratulations.
That's your fault, Marshall plan and all... but it's not that cut and dry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_1980s_recessionOf course. My point was not that I wanted other countries to stop investing, I was merely pointing out that the economy of the world is invested in the economy of the United States, which is most likely about to screw everybody again.