Seven Wishes wrote:Where the hell do you drudge up this shit? Boy, you really drink the Cool-Aid, don't you? What is this misconception that anyone on the left side of the spectrum is a lazy, good-for-nothing moocher?
I've worked my ass off my whole life - never collected unemployment. I've made good money at times, and not so much at other times. No matter where I fall on the economic spectrum, I have empathy. I want to help take care of those less fortunate than myself. You're only as strong as your weakest link.
As long as anachronistic neo-conservative closet fascists like you don't overly infiltrate the gene pool - often using your "religion" as a sword, I might add - the reality that we're all in this together will never be lost on the majority. So, keep bleating and blabbering away. Don't let me stop you.
Incidentally, this little table should help clear up any misconceptions about whose economic policies create more jobs. That retraction (austerity) slows economic growth and increases unemployment is an unassailable fact.
President Avg. % Rate Change Per Year
Truman (D) -0.15
Eisenhower (R) 0.357
Kenedy (D) 0.066
Johnson (D) -0.42
Nixon (R) 0.333
Ford (R) 0.933
Carter (D) -0.15
Regan (R) -0.2
Bush I (R) 0.5
Clinton (D) -0.438
Bush II (R) 0.263
That depends on how one measures economic decline or growth.. and the lag those policies incur from inception to effect. Honestly, I think government finance policyl has little effect on things economically, whereas central banking policy has huge ramifications.
Can you provide the source for that data? I'd love to chart it against Fed rates.
Look at World GDP vs. World equity and asset values. (shown below)

World GDP is plunging in diverging contrast to world asset and equity values nominally exploding.
Clearly the pain is being felt at the middle to lower class levels.. as incomes are declining, and jobs are scarcer... For those people, austerity comes as a consequence. They tighten their belts. Spend less. IF US GDP is sub 2% (and it is if one removes the .8 that accounted for inventories in the last report) then who is buying all the crap? It certainly isn't the US consumer, who accounts for 70% of US GDP.
At a macro level, there is only one thing that is forcing austerity on the whole of individual economies (and nations), and that is falling demand. It is the ultimate cause, and business deals with falling demand the way it always has, layoffs, technology improvement, etc..
In the US.. companies have maxed out their downsizing and and output levels, and while long used measures of economic health at the macro level (DOW, S&P, GDP) say "better"... the indicators of economic health at the micro level (Labor Force Participation Rate, U-6 Rate, Wages) say "not better"..
IMHO the real question has to be:
How can Wall Street equity prices be at all time highs... while the man on Main Street is earning at all time lows? What is causing normally convergent indicators to now diverge?
The answer is Fed policy.
- 1.02 Tillion per year, 85 Billion a month. Nearly 7% of annual US GDP ($14 Trillion) is made of up Quantitative Easing!
- Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) that allows banks to borrow at "0%" and then speculate on the open market via their trading desks. (because Dodd-Frank didn't close what Glass-Steagal had previously banned)
The problem here is deflation.. which is what the Fed is desperately trying to stave off, because it (deflation) is a natural consequence of falling demand, and directly contrary to an economy that requires "constant growth" (read: inflation).
The Fed policy is indicative of a mindset that believes pumping trillions into an economy will spur growth (demand)... which has not happened because simply injecting money into the economy does not create demand. There has to be a some industry that needs easy money and consumers wanting access for demand to occur. Just like the dot-com boom, and the housing boom. Both fueled by Fed ZIRP. The problem this time is the that the money is not entering the Main Street economy. It's only entering Wall Street. One need only examine those diverging indicators to see the truth for what it is.
What is happening now is the precursor to deflation. Diminishing returns for the Trillions being put in. Just compare to the dotcom and housing boom.
The Fed has been "pushing on a string".
My sister is a data integration specialist with FedX, she integrates FedX software with corporate shipping departments with Fedx .. and she says its "insanely slow"... that is demand falling.... and that is not normal for her before the holidays.