Gerald McGrew wrote:
Now I'm sure you can find economists who say it was all a waste of money, etc., but that's not the point. The point is, all the surveys of economists that I'm aware of indicate that a majority of them agree the stimulus worked. If you can find a survey where the same majority of economists advocate your approach instead (no stimulus, no bailouts, tax reform, deregulation = economic recovery), then I'm all ears.
You just got done saying that the "battle of the experts" wasn't relevant -- it was the data.
So, I said "o.k" -- and I posted the data that is used to bolster the nonsense 3 million "saved or created" figure. You've not posted anything to support that figure. To my understanding, the figure is generated from that CBO report I cited, and Elmendorf came right out and said that the figure is predictive modeling and not based on reality and does not confirm or refute the 3 million saved or created number.
If you have some evidence of that "saved or created" number, then post it. If not, just say you don't have it, but you trust the economists who say the stimulus worked. I could show you a list of 200 economists that say it didn't and that the stimulus was inadvisable. But, it doesn't matter. If I do that, you'll say that the "battle of the experts" doesn't matter. But, then you'll say it does matter when a survey of 50 economists say the stimulus worked.
Gerald McGrew wrote:
Not sure. I'm against the stimulus to begin with. I said that IF WE HAVE TO HAVE ONE, I would spend it on areas like that, and gave you a couple of examples.
Your created/saved allegation is unsupported as to what the stimulus actually did -- well, unless you have authority besides bare allegation and the predictive CBO report -- you haven't linked to it, though. You've ASSUMED that the 3 million saved or created line is true. If you have seen some evidence of it, I'd love to see it too. I'll wait for you link or post.
So your proposal here (spend money on NASA programs) is too vague to be able to respond to.
It wasn't a proposal. I said I am against the Stimulus.
HOWEVER -- IF we have to spend stimulus I think it stands to reason that spending it on a heavy industry or high technology that involves researchers, designers, engineers, chemists, materialpersons, fuel technologies, plastics, robotic, computers, etc. is a better use of funds then million dollar guard rails around dry lakes, and turtle crossings in Florida, or boondoggle airports that service no passengers but bear the name of a powerful Senator....
Gerald McGrew wrote:
No. They could have filed for reorganization and probably would have. What bankruptcy reorg would have allowed them to do, however, is break the costly labor contracts....among other things. That's what got bailed out. And, arguably, the government bailout of government motors did not work as well as it has been sold by the Democrats:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/paulroderic ... n-edition/
They did go through bankruptcy and they did reorganize. Doing so with the backing of the federal gov't meant it went much faster and they were able to stay open during the process...
http://money.cnn.com/2012/05/08/news/co ... /index.htm
And, they broke the normal bankruptcy laws, and retained UAW contracts handing a lot of control over to the union. It was a giveaway to the unions, and it ripped off the bondholders who had legitimate expectations that were thwarted when the law was given an end-around.
Gerald McGrew wrote:
"Other supporters of the bailouts, and even some critics of them, say that Romney deserves no credit for the turnaround, given that he opposed the federal bailout that kept the companies alive during the bankruptcy process. Without that $81 billion in funding, the companies would have been forced to go out of business and liquidate, according to those experts. "There was no way they could get financing," said Conway. "They were burning money so fast, with no end in site, that no one but the government was going to give them money.""
So your solution would have been to at best, allow GM to renege on retirement promises and break their union contracts, and at worst, let them die? How exactly would that have helped increase or save middle class incomes, and thereby demand?
"Renege" is not an applicable term. Bankruptcy reorg provides protections and collective bargaining in these union contract situations.
Gerald McGrew wrote:
Because raising taxes during a recession is inadvisable, and raising taxes when the country is stagnating with high unemployment and 1.7% GDP growth teetering on another recession is equally inadvisable. As Obama said, the last think you want to do during a recession is raise taxes:
http://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiepavli ... aise_taxes I think that statement is equally applicable given the precarious state of the economy now, even though we are not technically in a "recession"by the measure of increasing or declining GDP.
So what effect do you feel raising top marginal rates on millionaires and billionaires would have on the economy?
One, it's not just millionaires and billionaires whose tax rates will be raised. Get that straight. That's a red herring. If it were just "millionaires and billionaires" there would hardly be an argument over raising the rate from 35 to 39%. Moreover, those millionaires and billionaires use tax loopholes to get out of paying the marginal rate anyway. So, I'm not all that concerned about the rate when it comes to millionaires and billionaires, at least not until the tax code is streamlined to get rid of the loopholes, two of which I previously described.
The rate going up from 35 to 39% on the upper level of individual income tax rates would not have a huge impact on the economy. However, raising the capital gains tax from 15 to 23.9 and the tax on dividend income from 18 to 43% would have humongous impacts on the economy.
An important impact, though, is that higher tax rates can reduce tax revenues collected by causing an overall drop in income producing work done, and/or causing people to report less income.
The more important point is that an increase in effective tax rates won't do anything to help the economy recover.
I think the implication of your question is that you think that the raising top marginal tax rates won't do anything to the economy. If that's true, then why do you want to do it? If it's a social fairness experiment, then I'm not interested. I'm interested in the middle and lower class income earners making more money, having jobs, taking care of themselves and their families and having more opportunities. I don't need symbolic gestures where some billionaire pays an extra 4 or 5 percent. That doesn't make anyone any happier. and I really don't need an EMPTY symbolic gesture of raising a rate from 35 to 39%, but retaining loopholes which means the millionaires and billionaires still don't actually end up paying any more in taxes.
Gerald McGrew wrote:
One example might be to disallow higher income people from writing off the sale of property or an investment as "long term capital gains." Another would be to disallow things like "Variable prepaid forward contracts" which allow income to be classified as unrealized appreciation. What rich people do is take millions of dollars in stock and "lend" it to an investment banker, who pays them for the loaned stock. The money is gained by the rich guy, but is considered "unrealized appreciation" until the stock is eventually sold. Closing that loophole could raise 1/2 to 3/4 of a trillion dollars over 10 years.
How is that different than raising taxes in this economy, which you just said above shouldn't be done?
Because it is a different kind of money being taxed. When a billionaire creates a fiction that he is "lending" stock to an investment banker and then he actually realizes profit on that transaction, but due to the form of the transaction he gets to wink-and-nod that it really isn't realized gain, even though he has the money and can spend it, I think that he should pay income tax on it. Raising the overall marginal rate applies not just to a few millionaires and billionaires but to small businesses across the board, who are NOT millionaires and billionaires and who bust their asses to earn a buck. Some of them are HIGHLY effected, as Subchapter S corporations, by a marginal tax rate of 39 rather than 35% -- some are working on a shoestring budget out here.
Gerald McGrew wrote:
Examples: the EPA rule requiring Alaska ships to use a low sulfur fuel. The removal of the lead based paint opt out rule which now homes built prior to 1978 be renovated while supervised by an EPA representative (adopted in 2010). There are many many many new costly regulations:
http://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/u ... -FINAL.pdf
So to help spur the economy, you would have more sulfur in our air, and lead...well, everywhere?
No, because these regulations aren't cleaning anything up that is actually a problem. That's the reality. The lead based paint thing is a big red herring. Nobody uses lead based paint in houses anymore, and if you live in a house that was built before 1978 that was painted with lead based paint, its' still not a problem unless someone eats the paint. And, all you have to do is repaint it.
Gerald McGrew wrote:
No, preferably not. There are thousands of pages of regulations that could be reworked, and each new plant requires approvals -- I think that the system for regulating and building nuclear plants could be reviewed to figure a way to build more of them.
The problem is, it's not regulatory hurdles that stop private companies from building nuclear plants. It's the cost. That's why they're almost never built without federal subsidies.
http://www.ucsusa.org/news/press_releas ... -0504.html
A lot of the cost comes from the regulations. They're almost never built without federal subsidies because the humongous companies that build them know that they can get federal subsidies. And, the federal government wants to give subsidies to built such plants, because then they attach regulatory strings.
Gerald McGrew wrote:
By doing some of the things I've already mentioned, and acting otherwise in a pro-business way. If you're suggesting Obama isn't up to the job, then maybe we need someone else in there to give it a shot.
From what I've seen, nothing you've proposed will change the market conditions I described. Chinese labor will still be way cheaper, and China/Asia will still be a dramatically expanding market, which makes it sensible for companies to locate their production there.
Then ipso facto nothing Obama is doing will change that either. Sounds like time for a change and someone to try something new.
Gerald McGrew wrote:
Christ -- is this the first time you've thought about these things? You strike me as someone who hasn't examined the arguments against your position at all. Catastrophic policies -- Health Savings Accounts -- allow insurance companies to compete across state lines - consumer directed health plans - among other things.
LOL. No, I just like to see what specific ideas people have in mind. Yours seems to be essentially more W. Bush policies, deregulation, "free market" solutions, etc. Of course we
know how those things worked.[/quote]
Bush wasn't "deregulation," as his administration increased regulations, and he worked with Democrats for most of his administration. Remember, he barely vetoed anything in his first term and a half.
Hand waving what I've written as "Bush policies" is just a blatant misunderstanding of what I've written and what Bush was all about economically. Moreover, as bad as the end of the Bush term was, for most of it, unemployment was under 5% and the economy chugged along at a good pace. He recovered from the 2000 recession, and had about 6 years going pretty good. It was the housing bubble and the finance bubble that caused everything to go kablooey, and to blame that on the policies of only one of the parties is either partisan or blind to reality. Both parties are to blame for that, and the Democrats are not innocent bystanders.