http://blog.american.com/2012/02/this-is-the-debt-chart-obama-and-geithner-should-be-ashamed-of/I mean, we won't have an economy by 2027, but no big whoop.And yes, i know this assumes no changes to the current path after 2013, but proposals are out there (like the Ryan plan) that were rejected. The President's own debt commission provided a long term plan, which was then roundly rejected. Ignoring our mounting debt issue won't make it go away. At some point, and that point gets closer every day, we will have to deal with it unless we want to see our economy crumble the way Greece has and Italy will in the very near future.[Edited on February 18, 2012 at 8:45 AM. Reason : I put dept in the title instead of debt. Facepalm.]
2/18/2012 8:44:51 AM
Which department?btw, I'm curious, do any of Gingromnetorum have a CBO checked plan for reducing the debt and what those projections would look like?I'm still waiting on one of them to stand up and say that when you have worked on targeted positive inflation and continued creation and easing of credit for decades and pulled demand forward for decades that it is going to take longer than a few years to dig out of that hole. None of them will say that. None of them will get up there and say "the fix for this clusterfuck we allowed to happen might take a decade or more to fix". The American people don't want to hear that shit. They believe in fairies and magic.[Edited on February 18, 2012 at 9:03 AM. Reason : .]
2/18/2012 8:59:10 AM
i must admit, not much of what the Republicans say makes sense, but Ryan has this one.to have your plan show unabated continued debt growth is unacceptable. I think this is a valid enough reason for Obama to lose the election, but more realistically, he should have pressure put on him to make a 2nd term budget plan that's not ridiculous.
2/18/2012 9:43:18 PM
the dept of what?Agriculture? Transportation? Defense?
2/19/2012 12:59:56 AM
Watch out guys! He has a graph! And I think the OP is talking about the dept of education.. Don't worry about it the US is beyond saving educationally..[Edited on February 19, 2012 at 3:44 AM. Reason : .]
2/19/2012 3:44:07 AM
^ Is that yours and HockeyRomans MO these days? Don't actually add any discussion to The Soap Box, just snark about how Republicans positions are so ridiculous that they aren't debatable?
2/19/2012 8:46:58 AM
Out debt level is unsustainable, a plan that does not address the continued growth of government spending and the inevitable collapse of medicare, medicaid, and SS doesn't deserve discussion. What does deserve discussion is how do we bring our debt back to manageable levels in the near term. I'm not suggesting that we can't ever run a debt, or that we need to eliminate all our debt in the next 5, 10, or even 20 years, but if we don't reverse the trend there will be problems, MASSIVE problems.But you're right, better to roll out stuff like "Watch out guys! He has a graph!" Maybe you don't have any concern for what we are piling onto the backs of future generations, but some people do.
2/19/2012 9:33:55 AM
What massive problems would those be?And I'm pretty sure SS is fine as long as we don't dip into the funds and stop giving temporary FICA tax cuts. As far as Medicaid and Medicare, the quickest way to get those costs down would be to get health care costs down in general. If the rest of the developed world is any indication, the quickest path to this is universal healthcare and kicking out the parasitic insurance industry...[Edited on February 21, 2012 at 9:54 AM. Reason : .]
2/21/2012 9:51:13 AM
I'm not even going to argue with you about SS. It's not currently on a sustainable path. Even the folks running it admit as much (read the letter they send you every year). You and I can hope for, at best, about $.50 on every dollar we give them. Just imagine SS is fine, let's ignore that looming disaster for a while and focus on other stuff.The massive problems I was referring to are things like interest payments on the debt taking up an increasingly large portion of the federal government's spending. If you have to pay out 1/3 of total income tax dollars taken in just to meet your interest payments (which is about where we are now) it precludes you from using those dollars for other things. Huge public debt can destabilize our currency and certainly weakens the dollar vs. other currencies. Once you hit a certain mark, usually around debt being 120% of GDP or more you start to see very real issues. We aren't there yet, but we're getting there quickly. We are fast approaching a debt level we've only had at the end of WWII, the difference is that now there is not plan or will from the folks in Washington to start paying down the debt like we did before. I'm not suggesting that we can't have public debt or that debt itself is bad, but we cannot continue to grow our debt without a plan to keep it in check or we will reach the point where we cannot reverse the trend.Look at what is happening in Greece and what is going to happen in places like Spain, Portugal, and Italy. That same mess is coming soon if we don't put our fiscal house in order.
2/21/2012 11:46:46 AM
Here's some fun reading for you:http://money.cnn.com/2011/01/21/news/economy/spending_taxes_debt/index.htmand there's some good stuff in the Wikipedia page about the budget.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_federal_budget
2/21/2012 11:55:23 AM
2/21/2012 12:07:03 PM
I wouldn't compare us to EU countries. Spain, Portugal, and Greece can't just create money, they have to get a bailout. We can create money, and the Fed has demonstrated that it will create any amount necessary to keep the stock market afloat. We also know that they'll hold interest rates close to zero for as long as necessary, which could be a decade or more.Japan is 250%+ GDP to debt ratio. Their debt is mostly internal, which does make a difference. The Japanese people can't really pull the rug from beneath themselves. The U.S. is in a different position, in that we don't actually make anything and a lot of our debt is owned by foreigners. If you hear what Bill Gross of PIMCO (one of the biggest bond holders out there) is saying, you know that we're basically stagnating right now. Zero percent interest rates are very, very bad, but moving interest rates up would result in a financial shit storm. I don't know what's coming, no one does, but when the economic winds do finally shift, it can't be pretty.
2/21/2012 12:11:37 PM
What do you mean we don't make anything?http://m.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2012/01/making-it-in-america/8844/[Edited on February 21, 2012 at 12:25 PM. Reason : a]
2/21/2012 12:17:23 PM
Alright, it's an exaggeration to say we don't make anything, but we make a small percentage of the things we consume and use. That's the nature of globalism, but if something happened and the dollar was no longer "king" of world currencies, we'd be in store for a major decline in standard of living or a rise in cost of living. We're playing a dangerous game.[Edited on February 21, 2012 at 12:27 PM. Reason : ]
2/21/2012 12:26:32 PM
Don't you worry about dept, let me worry about blank.
2/21/2012 12:50:39 PM
^^I'm not following what you're getting at. Are you claiming the current unemployment rate is due to our import/export ratio? Or that we'd suffer an economic collapse if the dollars position in the world changed?
2/21/2012 1:33:13 PM
More along the lines of the second thing. Our dollar is pegged to China's RMB, but if a floating exchange rate was allowed, it would be a bad thing for us.
2/21/2012 1:35:15 PM
2/21/2012 2:05:40 PM
nuclear has a long design and approval process. an approval process thats risky as hell if the government is as unstable and scared of everything as ours is. if the government reneges on some part of the process or some really stupid people get in power and cancel it all together then you lose your entire investment.which is really a shame cause nuclear is really the only long term way out of this energy mess.[Edited on February 21, 2012 at 2:29 PM. Reason : e]
2/21/2012 2:28:26 PM
Right, but what are the defining financial aspects of a nuclear build?You have long term and short term investments,risky and secure investments,then high return and low return investments.By just looking at it, we see that nuclear plants are a long term investment. Now, they're not alone in this property. Hold old is the Hoover Dam? The Panama Canal?We think that the investment risk and return should determine each other. A low risk high payoff investment doesn't exist and no one would invest in a high risk low payoff project.From the perspective of macroeconomics, what should we expect people are looking for today? I want to know why people decide to invest in others debt as opposed to creating something of value that will pay dividends long into the future.
2/21/2012 4:16:25 PM
2/21/2012 4:43:13 PM
2/21/2012 5:12:42 PM
2/21/2012 7:19:20 PM
2/21/2012 10:43:55 PM
2/22/2012 1:33:14 PM
insurance overhead isnt why healthcare is expensive and anyone who thinks it is is a liar or an idiot
2/22/2012 3:32:19 PM
^The red tape of having 5 payer systems is a big part of it. http://www.amazon.com/Healing-America-Global-Better-Cheaper/dp/B004KAB348My wife used to be the accountant for a bunch of medical practices (mostly specialists) and almost all of the doctors pulled in over $1 mil a year in salary.
2/22/2012 6:25:19 PM
2/22/2012 8:56:22 PM
2/22/2012 10:10:25 PM
^It was $600 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toilet_seatThe P-3C Orion antisubmarine aircraft went into service in 1962. Twenty-five years later it was determined that the toilet shroud, the cover that fits over the toilet, needed replacement. Since the airplane was out of production this would require new tooling to produce. These on-board toilets required a uniquely shaped, molded fiberglass shroud that had to satisfy specifications for vibration resistance, weight, and durability. The molds had to be specially made, as it had been decades since their original production. The price reflected the design work and the cost of the equipment to manufacture them. Lockheed Corp. charged $34,560 for 54 toilet covers, or $640 each.[2]President Reagan held a televised news conference in 1987, where he held up one of these shrouds and stated: "We didn't buy any $600 toilet seat. We bought a $600 molded plastic cover for the entire toilet system." A Pentagon spokesman, Glenn Flood stated, "The original price we were charged was $640, not just for a toilet seat, but for the large molded plastic assembly covering the entire seat, tank and full toilet assembly. The seat itself cost $9 and some cents.… The supplier charged too much, and we had the amount corrected."[3] The president of Lockheed at the time, Lawrence Kitchen, adjusted to the price to $100 each and returned $29,165. "This action is intended to put to rest an artificial issue," Kitchen stated.[2]
2/22/2012 10:24:23 PM
meanwhile, I've also seen $2000 buckets and millions wasted in "design" which amount to nothing more than an engineering outfit saying "no" to everything and never actually saying what needed to be done. But, yes, gov't is waaaaaaaaay more efficient. So much more efficient that Lockheed had serious reservations about ever charging 600 bux for a toilet seat. oh, wait...
2/22/2012 10:27:45 PM
Any large organization has huge amounts of cruft. It's funny to me that those arguments were used to combat Reagan and privatization in the 80s and now they are being used to put down government bureaucracy itself.
2/22/2012 10:32:26 PM
2/23/2012 9:15:39 AM
2/23/2012 10:43:26 AM
2/23/2012 1:48:55 PM
2/23/2012 1:53:14 PM
^http://cherryhill.injuryboard.com/medical-malpractice/how-much-do-medical-malpractice-lawsuits-contribute-to-health-care-costs.aspx
2/23/2012 3:24:52 PM
2/23/2012 3:35:47 PM
2/23/2012 5:20:54 PM
2/23/2012 5:22:15 PM
2/23/2012 6:08:55 PM
2/23/2012 6:18:24 PM
Chance there are really 2 main reasons. 1. You want to avoid a lawsuit. Regardless of your malpractice(which will go up if you get sued, or will find it difficult to get if you have too many) it is simply bad for business. You dont want that hurting your business and restricting you from getting on different insurances. Despite having Malpractice you still would have costs associated with the lawyers and time out of office. 2. Running more tests increases revenue per patient. So you might be 99% sure it isnt anything serious, but you get an xray or photo just to back you up and increase revenue.Ive given this example a bunch of times on here so one more wont hurt. In school we were in our neuro class and our doctor asked us if a young 18 yr old females comes into your office complaining of headaches. You do your exam and everything looks fine. What is the chance that she has a brain tumor? And who would order a MRI? (basically only the kiss ass in the class raised her hand) He said basically everyone was right (doing it and not doing it) the problem is that if this patient is in that 1% that has a tumor their lawyer will ask you two questions. 1. Will a MRI have shown the tumor? (yes) 2. Why didnt you order one? (and you are dead in the water, people dont care about percentages when it happens to them. "It isnt rare if its in your chair") So you have it drilled into you to do extra tests. You dont realize ANYTHING about costs or insurance until after you graduate though.
2/23/2012 6:33:58 PM
2/23/2012 7:41:31 PM
2/23/2012 8:25:44 PM
I have graphs too:
2/23/2012 9:28:50 PM
"Let me anticipate some of your objections."Hahaha, I'm going to start prefacing everything I post here with this-
2/23/2012 9:38:28 PM
2/24/2012 1:15:40 PM
Once upon a time, aaronburro saw a toilet seat at Walmart for $11.99. Forever after, aaronburro could never understand how anything toilet related could ever possibly cost more than $11.99.The end.
2/24/2012 2:22:45 PM
Price anchoring http://danariely.com/the-books/excerpted-from-chapter-1-%E2%80%93-the-truth-about-relativity/
2/24/2012 2:36:00 PM