My econ professor, who seemed to be no fan of the democratic party, when teaching the Laffer Curve made a point of saying all the current taxation hoopla was absurd. Saying something like looking at taxation in terms of Govt spending/GDP that in the past 100 years it has varied as much 45% and that for all the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy and all the taxation for those making over a certain amount that dems were looking for that you were only talking 4 to 8% differences. Which he called "fussing around the edges" and he considered both parties basically identical in fundamental taxation policies despite their attempts to look different on the issue. He also made point of saying that any gov that stays at or below 55% (which he said is somewhere near the zenith of the laffer curve) would do alright, and that only some Scandinavian countries were really pushing that edge.I'm not sure how much of it I buy, but it was an interesting point nonetheless.
2/12/2010 6:17:58 PM
It is an odd cultural trait of various societies. For some reason, although tax rates today are half what they were only thirty years ago, we collect roughly the same percentage of GDP in revenue.
2/13/2010 12:11:15 PM
Good thing those dollars collected by .gov buys the same amount of stuff.
2/13/2010 12:32:23 PM
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2010/02/virginia-gov-bob-mcdonnell-then-stimulus-bad-now-thanks-for-the-cash.php?ref=mp
2/16/2010 3:43:34 PM
^ So I guess the democrats now conceed that the stimulus was and always will be bad? Or are only people that always liked it allowed to like it now? The stimulus was barely passed in a majority democrat Congress, I wouldn't go around proclaiming that I always liked the stimulus.
2/16/2010 4:28:30 PM
^The GOPs aren't being called out for changing their mind after seeing it work, they're being called out for voting against while calling it necessary, for trashing it publicly & sending the Obama Administration pleading for specific projects in their home-states.http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/17/business/economy/17leonhardt.html?hp
2/16/2010 10:44:51 PM
Yes some repubs are being hypocritical. But that's not going to be a big enough issue to avoid the blood-bath that democrats have brought upon themselves this fall.
2/16/2010 11:16:58 PM
bloodbath... lolhttp://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2010/02/republicans-must-defend-senate-seats.html
2/16/2010 11:29:55 PM
2/17/2010 9:58:33 AM
2/17/2010 5:01:34 PM
Here is a list of over a hundred top republicans who opposed the recovery bill and then took credit for it, in may cases writing letters to the administration secretly pleading for the money, while publicly saying they oppose the very idea of it.http://thinkprogress.org/touting-recovery-opposed/
2/17/2010 5:49:22 PM
2/18/2010 11:45:14 AM
"Seems reasonable to me"All I am saying is they were pretty quick to play this up as a socialist agenda to destroy America while simultaneously reminding the administration that it was necessary that this pass, and that they get as much pork as possible, and then take full credit for something they voted against with big fake checks. If that sounds reasonable to you, then by all means vote incumbent Burr into office again, who is on that list of GOP hypocrites that you just described as reasonable, so he can vote against anti-rape amendments, tell his family to do a bank-run whenever the economy turns sour, who who stood against Tammy Duckworth's attempts to help veterans, who is anti-choice, who thinks domestic abuse ought to be a pre-existing condition, and who thinks the US constitution needs to be amended to ban gay marriage.
2/18/2010 1:27:35 PM
2/18/2010 2:56:11 PM
You should note that the inflation rate for last year was negative.
2/18/2010 5:48:04 PM
market will take due to the feds raising the borrowing rate by .25, nice little run that will be screwed come Friday...expect triple digit point loss.
2/18/2010 5:57:36 PM
2/20/2010 4:42:01 PM
I pointed out earlier, creating jobs was not the purpose of the original stimulus, it is a byproduct, but not the whole purpose. The purpose of the stimulus was to get money moving.
2/20/2010 4:53:17 PM
and boy did it ever get money moving... to democratic districts
2/20/2010 4:56:42 PM
Who have been net creditors to red states for who knows how long. Seems fair to me.
2/20/2010 5:02:46 PM
what a fucking child you are. I suppose two wrongs now make a right, then
2/20/2010 5:04:10 PM
Who said anything about "wrongs"?[Edited on February 20, 2010 at 5:06 PM. Reason : and you seem to be on your man period again]
2/20/2010 5:06:18 PM
well, it certainly can't be assumed that I was saying it was "right" to use a "stimulus bill" to funnel money to democratic districts. admit it, dude, you're a partisan hack. hell, you are PartisanHack]
2/20/2010 5:19:57 PM
No one said anything about right and wrong.For some period of time blue states have been sending out more in Federal dollars than they receive, red states the opposite.Knowing this, we'd expect blue states to be having more budget troubles right now. So it's at least a reasonable expectation that they get more federal dollar support during times like these.Do you have a legit argument or just more typical aaronignorant grand standing?
2/20/2010 5:27:50 PM
so, you are just going to ignore what I said and say the same thing again. at least you expanded on it.btw, we would expect blue states to be having budget issues NOT because of them paying more than they receive. Rather, we expect it because they espouse the very social programs that are causing the national budget to be hemorrhaging money. California is a PRIME example of this. so is Massachusetts, which is, not surprisingly, losing a shit ton of money on the very health-care plan Obama wants the whole nation to have, all the while swearing up and down that it will "reduce the deficit".But, at least you are man enough to admit that the porkulus bill was NOT about the economy. It was about rewarding those who are in power with political favours.]
2/20/2010 5:30:12 PM
2/20/2010 5:47:45 PM
2/20/2010 6:03:53 PM
In general, I'd be all about cutting spending and having tax rates at a level that keeps the "rainy day" coffers filled properly.I don't think cutting taxes in the short term is going to do much of anything until thisdecides to come back to the mean.
2/20/2010 6:06:28 PM
why do plots like ^that never use a damn log scale? a straight line trend on a plot like that makes no sense[Edited on February 20, 2010 at 6:09 PM. Reason : .]
2/20/2010 6:08:39 PM
^^^ cognitive dissonance is a bitch, isn't it.
2/20/2010 6:19:29 PM
that only took me a minute. and hey look, the trend really hasn't changed that much over the past 40 years.
2/20/2010 6:25:07 PM
So you're saying has been growing exponentially?Is our economy growing exponentially?
2/20/2010 6:48:56 PM
yes. that's how it works.
2/20/2010 6:51:52 PM
The economy grows exponentially?
2/20/2010 7:53:43 PM
It has to, because populations grow exponentially.if the economy grew linearly, we'd be in deep shit, because that means every generation would definitively be poorer than the previous, unless we enacted strict legal birth limits.this is such a basic concept though, it's really sad that this is what TSB has devolved into.
2/20/2010 8:00:19 PM
dude, it's Chance, what do you expect
2/20/2010 8:03:43 PM
Huh?The US population was around 215 million in 1970. The population in 2000 was around 280 million.Per that chart, total bank credit in 1970 was under 1 trillion. In 2000 it was around 4.5 trillion.In 2010 it had zoomed to 9.5 trillion.Productivity gains are definitely a component in there some where, I suppose Lonesnark could clue us in. But there was certainly nothing rational that can account for the doubling of credit from 2000 to today.Feel free to make the argument that credit growth since 1970 (you know, when we left Bretton Woods) has been appropriate for our economy.Ignoring all that, even if we allow populations to grow exponentially, credit growth is growing faster than population growth, which is the take home lesson.[Edited on February 20, 2010 at 8:08 PM. Reason : .]
2/20/2010 8:06:32 PM
2/20/2010 8:27:05 PM
i'm not entirely sure I've made any of those arguments. did you take too much Rogaine this morning?
2/20/2010 8:37:38 PM
I took about as much as the compelling posts you've made in this thread.I'm still bald
2/20/2010 8:42:43 PM
2/20/2010 10:24:58 PM
Eh?I'd argue inflation is the result of the credit growth, not the other way around.
2/20/2010 10:29:16 PM
I was referring to the whole "economy grows exponentially". It still stands that the "real growth" is different as those graphs are not inflation adjusted.
2/20/2010 10:45:24 PM
I'd argue that inflation is the result of a massive expansion of the money supply. though an expansion of credit could do the same, I suppose[Edited on February 20, 2010 at 11:14 PM. Reason : ]
2/20/2010 11:14:14 PM
http://www.stsci.edu/~jordan/other/economics/credit_us_economic_expansion.html[Edited on February 20, 2010 at 11:27 PM. Reason : .]
2/20/2010 11:26:53 PM
2/21/2010 12:43:45 AM
well, it is, but it isn't, though. It's not an expansion of the hard money supply, which is why I'd have to mull it over. It could have the same ultimate effect, though
2/21/2010 12:50:53 AM
2/21/2010 1:14:40 AM
But that wouldn't be an expansion of credit.
2/21/2010 7:58:59 AM
2/21/2010 12:42:38 PM