^ First and probably last time ever... but I agree with you. It doesn't look as though the economy is going to hit a recession, despite the fact that housing is doing terrible. It could still possibly happen because it's hard to forecast what will happen next month much less a year from now. The future does look somewhat bright though.
10/30/2007 10:20:32 PM
10/30/2007 10:41:13 PM
Are you suggesting that owners in Beijing managing a company operating in Raleigh are operating under some other set of laws than those found in Raleigh? If they do so then just arrest the local managers and enforce the law; DuH. Are you still that slow? You know you still owe me $100 right?
10/30/2007 11:30:24 PM
Let me help you out LoneSnark.
10/30/2007 11:35:41 PM
^ You're taking on LoneSnark concerning economics? Just so you know, you will lose.
10/30/2007 11:51:40 PM
10/30/2007 11:54:58 PM
10/30/2007 11:56:22 PM
^ Your mistake.
10/30/2007 11:59:57 PM
10/31/2007 12:12:21 AM
10/31/2007 12:22:56 AM
10/31/2007 7:52:54 AM
10/31/2007 8:14:39 AM
I agree on 1, 2, possibly 4, 7, 8, 9, and 10. That leaves 3, 5, and 6.3. This is not taking into account food and energy. I understand that people don't include these in their measurement of inflation because they can be volatile. But that doesn't change the fact that people still have to pay for them. If you count things that people are expected to have but aren't capital goods (health care, cost of college tuition for families, etc.) then inflation is actually outpacing wage growth at the moment.5. The trade deficit might be falling fast, but that doesn't change the fact that it's still hundreds of billions of dollars in the red. This is more of a market effect that is hard to control, but it's clearly obvious that there is still a lot of work left to do if the goal is to climb back into the black, which it may or may not be. Even trade balances aren't that important in the grand scheme of things.6. Again, it might be falling, but that doesn't change the fact that it's still plunging us hundreds of billions of dollars a year further into debt. This is a much more important issue because it's something we have direct control over. Irresponsible fiscal policies adopted over the past 7 years (changing from a balanced budget to a massive debt) are helping to ensure that the deficit will continue to grow for years to come unless taxes are increased or programs are cut. There's absolutely no reason why the government should not be able to work within the budget they set for themselves. I place the blame for the current massive debt squarely on the current administration and past Congress. They created a mess that the Democrats will have to fix for the good of the country but take a political hit at the same time. Almost like they planned it that way...Other than these areas, your list is pretty accurate. The US economy is very strong right now despite some setbacks which is just a testament to how resilient it is. One thing to watch though is the price of oil. It's been skyrocketing lately and if it keeps that trend up we might be in trouble. Also, the stock market is unstably high at the moment and if something were to happen there it would also be very bad. These two things might go hand in hand actually.
10/31/2007 9:22:20 AM
10/31/2007 9:25:09 AM
^ Part of the reason is that a shitload of information jobs were lost in August when the whole mortgage thing was taking place. I think that was the first time a net monthly loss happened since like 2001 or something. That was probably enough to spike unemployment up .3%.
10/31/2007 10:13:41 AM
IMStoned420:3. We are trying to track inflation, which is the erosion of the value of the dollar by monetary forces, not whether or not people pay more for things. The goods you mention: food, energy, college tuition, etc, are rising not because of inflation but because the resources of society are being shifted to favor the providers. That the providers of these goods are raking in huge profits means their input prices are not rising, all that is rising is the prices they charge, and pocketing the difference as profit. As such, you can say that the markets for these goods are broken due to either insuficient competition or insufficient supply, but you cannot say they are a sign of inflation. 5. Sure, but like you said I doubt the goal is to get into the black, just to get halt the slide of the dollar6. Yes, it is still in deficit which is inexcusable with tax receipts rising 11% a year. But, the deficit is smaller than annual GDP growth, so while the debt is still growing in absolute terms, it is shrinking relative to our ability to pay.[Edited on October 31, 2007 at 10:18 AM. Reason : .,.]
10/31/2007 10:17:02 AM
We can thank George W for #3 ^Conservatives bitch about liberals giving handouts to the poor; the problem with the current administration is that they tweaked the economy to give more big profits to big corporations
10/31/2007 10:25:03 AM
10/31/2007 10:33:23 AM
anyone reading page 3 of this thread will wonder what this has to do with attacking Iran. Then again, this all ties into the doom of the US attacking Iran and the economic repercussions.
10/31/2007 10:47:16 AM
^ The same thought has crossed my mind for the past page and a half. It's turned into a good discussion though, so roll with it...
10/31/2007 11:02:51 AM
IMStoned420, you admit that what you are tracking is not inflation, merely loss of consumer surplus. But, here is the fundamental difference: inflation is permanent, producer surplus is not. As production grows, consumption slacks, and profits get eaten away by competition, then prices will fall back to their old position + 2% inflation. It will not be deflation when the price of gasoline drops back to below $2 a gallon, it will simply be the restoration of normalcy. This may take a long time. In the case of food it will require a shift in Government policy away from Ethanol production. In the case of tuition it will require the founding of new universities, the expansion of old ones, and training lots more professors.
10/31/2007 12:57:06 PM
Inflationhttp://tinyurl.com/25mkuq]
10/31/2007 8:45:18 PM
how much better than iraq is iran?
11/1/2007 3:05:45 AM
11/1/2007 11:14:09 AM
Fascinating insight, SantaSand. Wait, don't you owe me $100?[Edited on November 1, 2007 at 11:13 PM. Reason : .,]
11/1/2007 11:13:40 PM
We must be living in an American service based economy because SandSanta just got served! (I'm so, so sorry)(Not really)[Edited on November 2, 2007 at 12:17 AM. Reason : bitches love smileys]
11/2/2007 12:17:02 AM
LoneSnark pwnt NoChance
11/2/2007 6:51:08 AM
Just want to point out that going into Iran is no longer IF, but WHEN.
11/8/2007 9:52:02 AM
Well, oil is $100 a barrel. Iran has oil. Let's invade them and take theirs. That is sure to work right? RIGHT?!?!
11/8/2007 9:58:57 AM
War in Iraq really was a waste. W did not even bring us lower oil prices which was the primary reason for going there. I guess omar, sabeeb, and yusef blowing themselves up everywhere causes too much instability to get the oil pipes flowing good.
11/8/2007 12:19:14 PM
HUR, it is equally easy to believe they invade Iraq for the purpose of driving up oil prices.
11/8/2007 2:28:33 PM
Fox News anchor calling for USA-sponsored terrorism inside Iran. Classy.
11/9/2007 12:03:02 PM
There's certainly plenty of precedent for that type of thing in Cold War Latin America
11/9/2007 12:09:44 PM
Iran nuclear drive 'a grave threat': French FM
11/19/2007 12:42:53 AM
if they didnt before, after the constant threats and sanctions by the US, they do nowit seems real strange to me that IRAN's tone has changed since Putin visited.i think he told AJ that he will be backed and to be confident, since then his tone has changedalso i think part of the reason gas prices are high is because opec refuses to raise production, because of america's threats against iran
11/19/2007 12:46:45 AM
^ Jumpin' Jesus on a pogo stick! Now that's blame-America-first agitprop if I ever heard it! Just, "Wow."
11/19/2007 1:09:34 AM
how about blame who's responsible, i dont have a complex since i blame the USA for some things and IRAN for others, you and your people seem to blame EVERYTHING on someone elseyou're in the 'blame someone else first' crowd, check yourself before you wreck yourselfICE CUBE
11/19/2007 1:13:40 AM
^ You have no retort.
11/19/2007 1:27:42 AM
attacking Iran would be retarded. We barely have enough troops in Iraq as it is, and Iran is a much bigger country. Why not let other countries attack Iran instead of the US? They seem to be pissing off enough people.
11/19/2007 7:21:39 AM
b.c other countries have no need to. Compared to other global events; Iran is relativly non-problematic. Perhaps your time may be better spent as to why the US/Iran has shitty relations instead of wasting time beating the war drum.
11/19/2007 9:27:14 AM
Didn't we already invade Iran? or was that Iraq? what's the difference?
11/19/2007 10:14:45 AM
On CNN today I overheard that Bush came up of the ORIGINAL and GREAT idea to arm Afghanistan local militias to help aid battle the War on Terror and the remnants of the Taliban.We should have in the 1980's helped out the Mujahideen with guns and money to fight those communists. oh wait a second......
11/19/2007 12:59:50 PM