7/15/2010 11:05:45 PM
7/16/2010 12:11:34 AM
Why doesn't John Kerry just give the unemployed some of his wife's money?
7/16/2010 12:41:13 AM
^ I hate this argument. Kerry and every other member of Congress pay taxes, a portion of that tax money is used for unemployment just as yours is. No one is asking for you to take the money from your savings account and give someone else an extra week of unemployment.
7/16/2010 12:47:43 AM
^ I was joking--but this, of course, was self-evident. Since you've apparently got your hackles up, how long is "long enough" for individuals to draw unemployment payments?[Edited on July 16, 2010 at 12:56 AM. Reason : And it was ol' Ed who brought up "shocking" GOP "net worth" in the OP. FYI. ]
7/16/2010 12:52:18 AM
^that is a good question, what is the ideal number of weeks for unemployment in a severe recession (haven't seen many specifics in this thread)
7/16/2010 9:22:26 AM
to me, the original 52 week claim period used by the state of NC before the recession is more than enough.
7/16/2010 10:39:38 AM
^^ Thanks. I think it's certainly a fair question.Maybe we should get everybody on the record with an answer?
7/16/2010 12:37:52 PM
7/16/2010 1:26:54 PM
How long unemployment is extended probably depends on the goals of unemployment.From a Keynesian macro perspective, unemployment serves as an automatic stabilizer that helps prevent aggregate demand further from the unemployment that results from this or that demand shock. To serve this purpose in previous recessions, I can't imagine needing more than 99 weeks (if we really needed that many). However, as some have pointed out that, long-term unemployment is rising to higher levels than any previous modern recession. So maybe we are in liquidity trap that will not be easy to get out of and maybe we need to extend unemployment longer to avoid another negative demand shock while the economy is still weak?If that is the case, maybe extending unemployment is the way to go. But I don't know that it is. Maybe long-term employment isn't increasing because of an extended lack of aggregate demand. Maybe it is rising because we are witnessing a structural shift in the economy away from construction and finance and toward...something else. In other words, maybe the NAIRU itself is increasing. Greg Mankiw speculated today on his blog about this topic:http://gregmankiw.blogspot.com/If that is the case, we shouldn't extend unemployment, we should help the long-term unemployed train for new careers.
7/16/2010 1:26:59 PM
I think unemployment should continue to be extended until the rate of job creation looks like it is meaningfully moving to a point where it will out-pace population growth.And I echo some of the sentiments from Socks that we have a long term problem on our hands. We essentially squandered the past decade on housing and finance. Some of our best and brightest went into finance because it's easier to get richer in that field, often to the detriment of everyone else.
7/16/2010 5:54:39 PM
7/16/2010 6:13:04 PM
We're going to do what we've done for the past decade, leave it to the Corporatacracy to figure out how to get us out of this. My guess is they'll keep pushing for stimulus so their bonuses stay fat for as long as they possibly can. The money thrown at the unemployed is chump change for them.But, like Socks pointed out, we need to retrain those with stale-ish (and getting staler) skills for new industries.
7/16/2010 6:20:17 PM
The recent efforts to extend unemployment that failed by one vote, how long were they looking to extend it?
7/16/2010 6:49:09 PM
7/16/2010 8:08:31 PM
This administration has, and continues to, dole it out to the banks in various forms of stimulus and yet you're in here crying about those lazy unemployed people loving that 20k/yr income and hoping to stay on it forever.Oh sure, you'll rail on that too. Please, continue to paint your conservative brush on EVERYTHING while ignoring reality as if we can snap our fingers and your panacea of low taxes and personal responsibility will have everyone bootstrapping tomorrow and the economy growing at 10% by next quarter.
7/16/2010 8:52:58 PM
7/16/2010 10:33:34 PM
7/17/2010 7:19:06 AM
I believe that as long as the handout is being offered, it will be taken. After a reasonable amount of time the individual should be responsible for themselves.You believe it's the governments job to compensate everyone throughout a recession no matter the financial impact in the future.Your idealism makes you dense. If a person doesn't have a crutch they will adapt and overcome. Too much UE holds them back.
7/17/2010 9:37:53 AM
The uncertainty this admin is creating is keeping businesses from hiring. You can lable it greed or whatever, but a lot of businesses are sitting on their cash, freezing spending/hiring, until they figure out what the admin is going to pass next, see the exact details, and determine what it is going to cost them.The deficit is hurting and the admin saying we are going to have to make some "hard choices" only means those who produce will be paying more...but how much more?
7/17/2010 9:42:51 AM
^^ I don't think you really grasp macro economics. What you are suggesting - and this is a very important point I will make again and hopefully it sinks into your cranium this time - ABSENT STRUCTURAL FIXES TO THE REST OF THE ECONOMY, you're calling for a depression and a severe drain on the nations skill set that is required to keep the US as an innovative leader and world power. This is what will happen when you force millions to seek a means to survive. They'll sale their homes at losses which will impact their ability to consume. They'll have to settle for jobs where their skill set isn't maximized. Their spouses will have to take different jobs, a further drain on skills. Their childrens lives will be disrupted in ways we aren't sure about. I thought pointing out I voted for Lawson and Munger would clue you in that I'm not a liberal or believe in liberal policies but you apparently can't entertain the idea that someone can be both fiscally conservative and for UE - and here is another important point - GIVEN THE PRESENT STATE OF THE ECONOMY. Again, so long as corporate interest via back room deals have been in charge of this country for decades, and so long as they've managed to establish socialism for a rich, you're god damn fucking right I'm in favor of my fellow common man and woman getting (for a lot of folks) what amounts to fucking pennies.We've wound ourselves into a real nasty web of easy credit and government intervention in the economy that spans decades. You don't just unwind that shit by saying "sorry, fuck you, I know the economy sucks but um, too bad, get a lower paying job, I don't care if you were formerly an engineer, this country doesn't need any more of your kind". It's going to take decades to get out of this shit and until there is some real willingness to reign in the elites on that end of the economy I'm not going to call for cutting off UI.Now, if you'd like to attempt some facts to support your ridiculous idea that people are just happy to hang out on UI then be my guest.
7/17/2010 11:13:03 AM
do I need to post a link to human nature? search unemployment fraud. I understand macro economics. you assume if a person no longer has UE they will go earn zero dollars. you understand the instinct of self-preservation, that still exists (believe it or not) in the nanny state we have today. there will be added casualties like you suggested but casualties are part of the market being corrected. you also continually ignore the fact that I am in favor of some UE, just not a blank check forever.you also have failed to suggest any means of continually paying for such a program. and yes, a fucking engineer should go flip a burger in the short term to take care of himself. maybe has to take 2 jobs. why is that so wrong? he is capable. then the person who would normally flip the burger could go to the job an illegal is doing, then all the illegals will leave and solve 2 problems at once.
7/17/2010 12:54:19 PM
Again, no facts as to how you arrived at your "UI is too long imho" statement. Good going, you're clueless.
7/17/2010 2:31:16 PM
fraud - http://imkane.wordpress.com/2010/07/11/mismanagement-and-fraud-cause-7-1-billion-overpayment-in-unemployment-benefits/ANDstudies showing people will milk UE - http://blog.heritage.org/2010/05/13/effects-of-unemployment-benefits/
7/17/2010 4:07:29 PM
^ In support of this:
7/17/2010 4:23:23 PM
Why has fraud even enterred into the discussion? Whether the limites are 4 weeks or 99, you're going to have fraudsters. You want to know where else you can find fraud? In the fucking private sectorFrom this guyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Madoffand this guyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allen_Stanfordand these guyshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enronand these guyshttp://www.newsobserver.com/2010/07/16/583631/goldman-sachs-will-pay-550-million.htmlYour study is cute. First of all, it used data from 2003-2007, a time when jobs were plentiful. It was limited to the standard 26 weeks. Before even looking into that study we can try and get in the mind of someone on UI. Jobs are plentiful so fuck it, I am in fact going to milk this for what its worth and I'll snag a job near the time the benefit expires. Btw, those UI benefits those people were milking were paid into by them and their employer, not the taxpayer.After we look into that study more, we see nuggets like this:
7/17/2010 5:09:26 PM
^ Anger issues?
7/17/2010 6:19:47 PM
Just waiting for someone to tell me why they always try to apply their politics in a vacuum and ignore reality...hell, ignore facts. This goes for both sides but at the moment it's the conservatives (sans Socks``) that can't seem to understand the current state of the economy.
7/17/2010 6:40:23 PM
^
7/17/2010 6:57:26 PM
I figure Potty Mouth has it right. I mean, I understand what the conservatives are saying. Incentives do matter. But I don't think modest extensions in UE are going to result in huge numbers of people abusing it like it were a paid vacation.
7/17/2010 7:29:48 PM
But why do you insist on calling a 200% extension to be modest? It is an insoluble opinion as to how long is long enough. Especially when every modest extension seems to breed yet another modest extension. The objectors in this thread seem to object to the seemingly unending support. So, the question is, Socks, do you not understand why unemployment benefits were time delineated to begin with? That said, why the objection to portraying what is in effect a generous severance package as paid vacation? It is literally paid vacation. You are being paid not to work. It doesn't take either abuse or fraud for the system to operate as paid vacation. It does not take 40 hours a week to obtain three employment encounters. All three can be knocked out on Monday. Spend the other six days at the beach and you are honoring the system as it was intended to operate and how I want it to operate.
7/17/2010 7:54:17 PM
^ you can scroll up for why i think an extension in unemployment time limits would be warranted (and as you note the question of how long is long enough is "insoluable" or at least doesn't have answers that can be summed up easily in this thread).As for your second comment, I think we apparently have different definitions of "vacation". True, both unemployment and vacation are paid time off, but does that make them synonyms? Sick leave is also paid time off, but I wouldn't say I was going on "vacation" to recover from strep throat. Vacation has positive connotations that "unemployment insurance" does not. Think about it this way. Is there a real difference between "jerking off" and getting a "hand job"? They both amount to the same thing (getting your knob polished), but I would still say there is a qualitative difference between the two. [Edited on July 18, 2010 at 12:06 AM. Reason : ``]
7/18/2010 12:03:44 AM
7/18/2010 12:44:11 AM
^ i know. i personally prefer a longer time period. and not even forever. Primarily for this moment, when I do worry about the economy being in a liquidity trap.But honestly, I am watching Doctor Who right now and cant even think about it.
7/18/2010 1:05:14 AM
Now that is something that can be discussed and it not be all opinion. A liquidity trap is bunk, the federal reserve (FR) alone can fix any liquidity trap, it just might need powers it does not currently have (Helicopters). But, either way, government spending will not and could not help solve a liquidity trap, as the problem is a shortage of cash and the federal treasury does not currently have the authority to print money, only the FR does, and there is no law that the treasury must issue debt before the FR can print money.
7/18/2010 10:17:58 AM
7/18/2010 9:04:58 PM
Wow, what great, thought-provoking ideas you have brought to light.
7/19/2010 9:05:55 AM
Eureka! We have consensus--that's what many of you claim to want, right?
7/22/2010 9:03:48 AM
according to Potty Mouth Dr. Summers must be an idiot.
7/22/2010 9:25:30 AM
Guess so.
7/22/2010 9:27:25 AM
7/22/2010 10:57:15 AM
hooksawI find it a bit telling that you'll readily clown economists, citing the 9/5 that predicted a recession and yet you'll happily site economic theory (not law) if you think it bolsters your case, to whit
7/22/2010 5:12:06 PM
This is out of context?
7/22/2010 5:22:23 PM
I'm kind of bored with this debate since you don't really offer any compelling arguments, but I'll probably go back later and inform you of how you're using that comment in a way that doesn't negate arguments I made before about the current recession and how UI should be treated differently.
7/22/2010 5:29:16 PM
^ Um. . .I wasn't even thinking of you or your "argument" when I posted that. It was DaBird who made the connection--but I don't disagree with him.Post what you will. But I think I'll decline the offer to participate in one of your nut-riding sessions. Thanks just the same, though.
7/22/2010 5:34:35 PM
Nut riding sessions?Anyway, the point still stands, looking at studies of unemployment when jobs were plentiful or using low income earners as the standard (which is what Summers apparently does) will give drastically different results. Thats really what this is about anyway, DaBird for sure, but likely you and I imagine the majority of conservatives probably think people on UI are just milking the system and are glad to stay on it despite a deafening roar of numbers and anecdotes that undermines your position.[Edited on July 22, 2010 at 5:48 PM. Reason : .]
7/22/2010 5:41:32 PM
Everyone knows if you subsidize something you get more of it. Except you. no doubt there are *some* who need that long and legitimately cant find work. there are far more who use the extra time to hold out for something better.
7/22/2010 9:21:02 PM
Are you trolling? I posted a link that calls this THEORY into question using academic studies. I bet you don't even know what a theory is do you?
7/23/2010 7:01:08 AM
I have an opinion and you have an opinion...thats fine. but our current path is irresponsible...we have no way to pay these benefits and they have turned into political fodder.you cannot just blindly support paying until the economy comes back, because it never will.
7/23/2010 8:23:13 AM
7/23/2010 10:58:31 AM