1. Was the recession not caused by an overabundance of supply? Think of the lengths producers went through in order to push their increasing supplies of houses/cars/money on people who's income was stagnant. 2. Currently, suppliers are operating below capacity. What could supply side economics offer us to remedy this situation? Theoretically, the producers could use the extra money gained from tax cuts to hire more workers, but that's becoming harder and harder to believe each time I read about a business stockpiling cash.tl;dr: large businesses have excess capacity and stockpiles of cash; what can supply-siders offer?
7/21/2010 2:49:11 PM
good thing all the bailouts and stimulus have been supply side too.[Edited on July 21, 2010 at 3:20 PM. Reason : a]
7/21/2010 3:20:23 PM
This recession had many causes, only one the government could do anything about now. 1. There is the reallocation shock, as the demand for large fixed goods such as houses and cars and financial services has crashed. They will not come back, whatever the government does. These industries need to shrink, dropping the regions of the U.S. that depend on these industries a long slow painful adjustment. 2. Regime uncertainty from government response to the collapses in 1. and the money shortage caused by 1., causing the growth of replacement industries to be slow to non-existent. 3. An honest to god old fashioned money shortage. Confronted with 1. and 2. and the resultant drop in expectant future income, the American populace has engaged in retrenchment, paying down debt and refraining from borrowing, sometimes involuntarily. As debt often serves as a form of money, think credit cards, this has resultant a shrinking money supply. The solution is both easy and scary. Government intervention has slowed the shrinkage of 1. and slowed the growth of 2., making the recession longer and more uncertain, making the recession longer and more uncertain. Fixing the money supply would have been easy, we just needed to run the printing presses to fill the void left by retrenchment. How is the question. Buying government securities just produces more mal-investment as the government spends it. An actual helicopter drop or money-gram would have helped the short term, with the long term result of devaluing the dollar as consumers start spending on credit again.
7/21/2010 3:23:06 PM
its hilarious because they picked the exact wrong places to spur demand (fucking cars and houses). YEAP LETS JUST PROP UP THE DUMB GAY BAD INDUSTRIES THAT GOT US IN TROUBLE, HEH! Combine that with supply side bailouts for the bad car companies and the bad banks and its just complete laffo.
7/21/2010 3:27:37 PM
ohshit, banks aren't lending!!! lets decrease interest rates!!! *banks all take the free money and invest it in federal bonds*[Edited on July 21, 2010 at 3:28 PM. Reason : a]
7/21/2010 3:28:41 PM
I mean there also haven't really been any tax cuts to hire more workers. There've been increases in taxes for covering healthcare costs, but thats about it.oh and that comedy hour 5k credit or whatever. lmao
7/21/2010 3:30:01 PM
tl;dr: the government did pretty much the exact opposite of what it should have done to fix the economy and you're right, supply side isnt the king of everything (especially when the supply is from bad companies)
7/21/2010 3:35:41 PM
Clearly we need more Keynsian deficit spending to get things back on track. The deficit isn't nearly high enough; let's see if we can get it up to $2 trillion.
7/21/2010 3:36:11 PM
lmao they even passed a motherfucking bill designed to guaran-fucking-tee hospitals get whatever money they bill and insurance companies get whatever they charge for premiums. It would be hilarious if it weren't so awful.[Edited on July 21, 2010 at 3:38 PM. Reason : a]
7/21/2010 3:38:27 PM
heres another good one: lets tax people who use home heating oil and any coal or oil companies who dont have friends in congress, then we can give the proceeds to companies who make "green" energy products (supply side owns, right?). Which companies do we pick? oh, well our friends of course
7/21/2010 3:41:15 PM
edit your posts shaggy
7/21/2010 3:45:41 PM
There are so many wrong opinions in here, I can't keep up.
7/21/2010 4:11:49 PM
^Racist.
7/21/2010 4:33:04 PM
7/21/2010 5:02:50 PM
The wars is what did it.[Edited on July 21, 2010 at 9:50 PM. Reason : compounded with the housing crisis]
7/21/2010 9:50:06 PM
7/21/2010 10:10:00 PM
7/22/2010 11:53:18 AM
Democrats debate extending Bush tax cuts for the richJuly 22, 2010
7/23/2010 12:57:08 PM
The opinion piece you linked to cites the NYT to support an argument that they weren't making.Look at the swing. Was this supposed to last? The article gives a myriad of reasons why the rich may be holding back, but none of it was oppressive taxation. Also-- if we're looking at this in the context of tax cuts, look at the correlation between lower taxes and increased savings among the top 5%. Yikes! It seems that the tax cuts had a much more stimulative effect on the bottom 95%.And some Democrats? The whole philosophy behind this stinks. "Oh please patricians, spend some of your excess money so that we plebs can make ends meet. In fact, take some of our money."
7/23/2010 2:41:19 PM
^ Yeah, I guess instead of "some" Democrats, I should've just posted "key" Democrat and others (Hoyer, Baucus, Bayh, and at least six other House Democrats) want to continue Bush tax cuts:Key Democrat backs keeping tax cuts for richJuly 21, 2010http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100721/pl_nm/us_taxes_conrad_3I suppose you'll now argue with Yahoo and Reuters as to whether Kent Conrad is a "key" Democrat or not. And I guess the Fed Chair is wrong, too:Bernanke Says Extending Bush Tax Cuts Would Maintain Stimulus to EconomyJuly 23, 2010http://tinyurl.com/399swclThe only real question is whether extension of the Bush tax cuts will be temporary or permanent. One other question, of course, is how hard will Obama and Pelosi (and Geithner) work to block this effort. Why do you think those folks want to extend the Bush tax cuts? The answer is self-evident: to continue to help stimulate the economy.[Edited on July 23, 2010 at 3:10 PM. Reason : .]
7/23/2010 3:09:09 PM
9 out of 253 Democrats can't be wrong.
7/23/2010 4:35:40 PM
They want to extend them because they're in districts where they're politically vulnerable.The Bush tax cuts were retarded.
7/23/2010 4:36:25 PM
7/23/2010 5:38:12 PM
7/23/2010 5:43:55 PM
^
7/23/2010 6:00:55 PM
What district is Fed Chair Bernanke running in?
7/23/2010 6:17:34 PM
Well he just stated the obvious. These tax cuts do stimulate the economy, that's not being questioned. I think the issue is, would the money be better spent elsewhere. This was all kind of implied in my earlier post:It's more than accepted that MPC decreases as income increases, giving the rich money will always be a less effective economic stimulus than giving the poor money.
7/23/2010 6:24:44 PM
7/23/2010 6:26:41 PM
Giving a tax breaks for the number of peanuts in your shit would stimulate the economy, that doesn't mean it's a good idea. I guess you ignored the rest of my post as it was over your head. If you really want I can explain it to you.
7/23/2010 6:29:23 PM
^ No one has ever been able to make sense of not letting people keep more of their own money. In addition, no one can adequately explain how if the individual earning the money is not entitled to either all of it or the overwhelming majority of it, how is anyone else (or government through redistributive "social justice" policies) entitled to it? [Edited on July 23, 2010 at 6:53 PM. Reason : Rational people know this instinctively.]
7/23/2010 6:52:24 PM
First off, you've completely ignored my point and derailed the thread because I started talking about shit you don't understand. But I'll play your game.You could take two approaches, #1 "is it really 'your money'" or #2 "did 'you' really earn it".#1 Money represents capital and labor. No one would dispute the creation of labor, but capital is a bit different. You can't make capital. You can add value to it, but it was here before any of us. Furthermore, since you didn't create capital, and you can't do labor without it, do you really ownership over something, which solely came from processes you had nothing to do with?#2 You can't make money without the collective world around you. Without the seller and the buyer you have nothing. It's not the actual labor that makes you money, it's the selling of it, which you couldn't have without a system creating the society that is so fundamental to the modern world.But do promise you'll get back to my original points.
7/23/2010 7:26:45 PM
Tax cuts are just a way to paper over the real problem: taxes. If the taxes collected were actually going to these grand liberal plans to help the poor and all that, maybe it could be justified. That's never what has happened and that's never what will happen, though. The money is either wasted or spent in ways that benefit select groups of people, rather than all Americans. A fuck ton of taxes just goes toward perpetuating the bureaucracy.A tax cut is nothing more than the government saying to the people, or a specific group of people, "anything you do in life belongs to us...but we'll give you a break, in this special situation, because we think it'll be politically advantageous or it'll encourage proper behavior as determined by us."The government can never allocate resources more effectively than the free market. People know what they want better than elected officials ever can. Modern liberals believe that the government knows how to spend money best. They would probably argue that if only we had the right Democrats in office, all the money would be spent in a good way. I'm wondering if there's anyone stupid enough to believe that bullshit.
7/23/2010 7:31:46 PM
taxes are the price we pay for effective government and the maintenance of public goodswhen the government offers to slash prices taxes, keep in mind there's no equivalent of China to outsource it all to, and in fact when government does outsource its functions it usually pays more and there is less oversight and lower quality
7/23/2010 7:37:31 PM
7/23/2010 7:45:47 PM
Keep trying to feel superior, Kris--I hope that works out for you. But if you won't believe that I know what I'm talking about, will you believe Obama's own Council of Economic Advisers chair?Romer's Research: Expiration of Bush Tax Cuts Will Be Highly Contractionary
7/24/2010 3:19:53 PM
do you ever make your own posts?I'm beginning to think you're just a copypasta bot.It's like someone aggregated an anti liberal rss feed and vomits it on random threads on TWWYour posts are the single most pointless and thoughtless out of anyone one this site right now.It's amazing you are able to get through day to day with the complete inability to think for yourself.
7/24/2010 3:44:54 PM
so, Kris, if it's not really your money, then I guess you won't mind me stopping by your place later today and taking all of it, along with all your stuff. after all, none of it is really yours anyway, right? You didn't earn it, so you won't mind me taking it. I'll see you around 2 or 3am
7/24/2010 4:40:29 PM
so, Herp, if it's not really your derp, then I herp you won't mind me derpping by your place later toderp and herping all of it, along with all your derp. after all, none of it is really herp anyway, derp? You didn't herp it, so you won't derp me herping it. I'll see you around derp or herp am
7/24/2010 5:29:35 PM
^^^^ No one cares what you're "beginning to think" about me. Address the post. And how is Romer--a member of the Obama administration--"anti liberal"? ^ Just wow. You and your ilk are what's wrong with this forum.
7/24/2010 7:36:53 PM
I thought it was pretty funny considering everything he said was completely retarded
7/25/2010 12:27:28 AM
supply and demand though a nice thought no longer exists in many businesses
7/25/2010 2:36:24 AM
^^ I post "serious academic research" by a top Obama economics official from one of the "world's leading academic economics journal" and you respond with. . .hooksaw's a poopyhead.andHerp derp! Please just stop posting and amuse yourself elsewhere. PS: Christina Romer is not a "he."
7/25/2010 10:08:49 AM
7/25/2010 10:29:49 AM
^ I hardly know where to begin. The position that taxes--especially high taxes and specific taxes--are contractionary is nothing new. It's been around longer than the both of us.And I post sources because if I didn't, some here would be howling, "LINK PLEASE?!!1" If you don't accept the positions of one of Obama's own top economics advisers, the Fed chair, and a growing number of Democrats in Congress, you'll never accept my argument no matter how well I make it.[Edited on July 25, 2010 at 10:36 AM. Reason : .]
7/25/2010 10:35:42 AM
7/25/2010 10:40:38 AM
^ I already did--I guess you missed it:
7/26/2010 11:22:22 AM
7/26/2010 10:56:06 PM
DR PROFESSOR HERP DERPPINGTON OF HURR DURR UNIVERSITY is awesome. I saw him present here at NCState two years ago. He had a solid gold belt buckle with Adam Smith's likeness. He believed it to be humorously ironic, and it was.
7/27/2010 2:42:09 AM