30 is an impressive number of pages.the economy? not so impressive.new evidence suggests the problem is not entirely due to stupid bankers. the problem seems to be related to the fact that as a group americans are a bunch of spoiled brats who have the attitude that they deserve the high life come hell or high water. hence, we've been living off credit, spending more than our means to produce. our individual, household debt is collectively 100% of our GDP. the last time this happened was 1929[Edited on February 27, 2009 at 10:38 PM. Reason : ]
2/27/2009 10:36:51 PM
2/27/2009 11:06:08 PM
crickets
2/28/2009 10:29:04 PM
2/28/2009 10:43:59 PM
uhh, yeah, [tens of] millions
2/28/2009 11:11:43 PM
hmmm.... i don't have very high credit card debt
2/28/2009 11:15:32 PM
2/28/2009 11:21:12 PM
Nope. I plugged the numbers into my calculator and arrived at your the same .8 revised figured you have via averaging the quarters. I then went looking for the data for the other countries to verify what you posted from the CATO link. The data I found for Germany didn't add up when averaging the 4 quarters. However, when you just sum the four quarters, it equals the -1.6% listed in your linkGerman datahttp://economic-research.bnpparibas.com/applis/www/RechEco.nsf/EcoFlashByDateEN/34267280D431713FC125755C003716B6/$File/EcoFlash066_english.pdf?OpenElementFeel free to average these numbers and see that Germany did better than the US last year from a GDP perspective.The data at this link doesn't match exactly for Germany (it's close) and I'm a bit miffed about what they have there for the US.http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/pls/portal/docs/PAGE/PGP_PRD_CAT_PREREL/PGE_CAT_PREREL_YEAR_2009/PGE_CAT_PREREL_YEAR_2009_MONTH_02/2-13022009-EN-AP.PDFItaly as well.[Edited on February 28, 2009 at 11:24 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2009 11:22:11 PM
^ even given all that, I'm not sure it follows, logically, that just because the US GDP dropped by a smaller percent than a certain other country, that "proves" that it is not partially or largely US's fault or it is not the US exporting our problems to the rest of the world
2/28/2009 11:34:15 PM
2/28/2009 11:36:35 PM
Then you should have said that. I didn't bother checking Europe's figures, it seems Cato made a mistake with Germany, as best I can see it's GDP didn't collapse until december and not enough to erase the previous year of gains.
2/28/2009 11:36:53 PM
watched an interesting documentary today I.O.U.S.A. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0963807/ - although all documentaries like this have a bias i thought the story they were trying to tell was portrayed pretty well - i recommend it
3/1/2009 10:46:34 PM
I saw some of it awhile ago. Pure rubish.
3/1/2009 11:00:59 PM
pleeease, oh enlightened one, show us the errors of their ways30 minute version here http://www.iousathemovie.com/
3/1/2009 11:19:30 PM
The federal debt is not that large. Other countries have higher debt ratios and are not having too much trouble. And the most important point: unfunded promises are not contractual obligations. The Government tomorrow could legally eliminate all SS, Medicare, and Medicade payments. All it takes is a 51% vote in both houses plus a presidential signature, or a 67% vote in both houses. That said, while it is less certain, as the supreme court could consider T-Bills an enforceable contract, it is unlikely, so a 51% vote could repudiate the entire U.S. debt. It would enforce a balanced budget upon the federal government, since no investor would ever again loan them money. But the point is that this is not a country wrecking problem.
3/2/2009 11:46:18 AM
^
3/2/2009 8:44:38 PM
3/3/2009 12:08:25 AM
Simply amazinghttp://www.northcountytimes.com/articles/2009/03/01/business/z7ac44fbb08f3294c8825756a00619d5e.txt
3/3/2009 12:52:08 PM
I'm so glad we're in the market for a house this summer. gg Impressive U.S. Economy!1
3/3/2009 12:53:33 PM
Yeah, as usual, those that already have the money will profit immensely from this. They'll go in and buy up many of these homes, rent them for a few years at or more the mortgage payment and then sell them for quite a bit of profit.I mean on that house, you could take out a 120k loan (20k to fix it modestly for rent) and rent the thing out for 800/month and cover the payment and taxes on it. And you shouldn't have too much trouble renting a 1600 sqft house at that rate in a decent neighborhood.In 5 years, that house should go back to 1989 levels at least for a very handsome profit.
3/3/2009 1:03:02 PM
LoneSnark has lost a lot of credibility in this thread.
3/3/2009 3:24:22 PM
well, he's got a tough job, defending a hooksaw thread.
3/3/2009 3:30:40 PM
^^ I'm sorry I took statistics in a Cato publication for granted. Geez, like no one else has ever referenced statistics that turned out to be mistaken. Especially when there is a chance the statistics were valid, I just don't think it is worth the effort to prove it. The author suggested "in the past 12 months", it is possible he meant from February to February. ^ ?
3/3/2009 3:42:03 PM
your overall contention in this thread has been, and apparently continues to be, "this is not a big deal folks. calm the hell down, recessions happen from time-to-time. just relax and it will work itself out. No need to get gov't involved, no need for new regulation. In fact, this is the perfect opportunity to strip out more regulation to allow the markets to operate more efficiently."am I off base here?
3/3/2009 3:49:12 PM
Not at all. You have me just right, just not alarmist enough. The economy is never so bad that assertive effort from the Government couldn't make it worse. I just didn't understand the connection to Hooksaw (I guess I get it now).[Edited on March 3, 2009 at 4:56 PM. Reason : .,.]
3/3/2009 4:56:16 PM
and the irony train rolls on
3/3/2009 5:40:45 PM
So the economy has turned to shit. What was the root cause? What should we do to prevent this from happening again?I think the root cause is a result of everyone (people in general, banks and the Govt.) spending money that they do not have (Credit). This is very potent when combined with spending bubbles (01 Tech bubble, 08 housing bubble). If this is indeed the problem then the obvious solution is to limit credit or provide incentives for saving. Its a little out of my league to even suggest a neat easy fix for that will promote financial responsibility of people, banks and Gov.
3/3/2009 11:13:47 PM
thanks for your invaluable contribution
3/3/2009 11:43:43 PM
^^ "Who are you? Perry Mason?"
3/4/2009 12:41:39 AM
^, ^^ Ok smartasses.Since our problem is overspending, why do we think overspending^10 is going to fix our problem?I can somewhat understand the logic of propping some banks to prevent total economic collapse, but frivolous govt spending doesn't make any sense.
3/4/2009 9:58:21 PM
Of course it does. It is the same logic that drove a republican government to spend like drunken sailors during their watch. They are trying to buy the loyalty of their constituency.
3/4/2009 10:46:17 PM
Yes, Republicans have not shown any fiscal responsibility either. That doesn't make what Obama is doing ok. Your post made me think of this quote.
3/4/2009 11:14:46 PM
Ah, but while that quote would probably be true in a democracy, that is not the system we enjoy. The groups that are living off the treasury are not the masses of voters but tiny minorities known as special interests. As such, the special interests which control the system have a strong incentive to maximize their take, which means not killing the golden goose, which means keeping taxes and regulation at reasonable levels.
3/5/2009 12:14:52 AM
hmm, i hope nobody invested in a DOW index fund in 1966 and expected to make any actual money by now
3/7/2009 8:31:13 AM
I was raked through the coals in Stock Market 2008 thread from the buy and holders.
3/7/2009 8:42:15 AM
woe be to anyone that sold their stocks in 1983.That said, you also need all the usual caveats when it comes to the DOW index and actual investors. Namely, an investor in the index return actually exceeds the DOW figure as the DOW is drug down by its composition bias (stocks are added when they are high, taken off when they are low). Such an analaysis also ignores the return through dividends. [Edited on March 7, 2009 at 9:52 AM. Reason : .,.]
3/7/2009 9:49:03 AM
3/7/2009 2:28:18 PM
3/7/2009 4:05:27 PM
In the long run, the stocks that make up the index go up more than the index does.
3/7/2009 10:37:08 PM
I don't doubt you, however, do you have a comparison readily available? I tried to find one myself, then I started to do the experiment myself but grabbing historical stock data isn't a quick process.It's sort a dead point anyway when talking about the Dow because it is a terribly structured and antiquated index as it is.
3/8/2009 11:45:27 AM
I do not. But the effect should be dwarfed by the annual return of dividends which the index ignores.
3/8/2009 12:15:33 PM
holy.... shit....i did not know this (the part in bold)
3/11/2009 6:04:13 PM
Settle down man. Who in their right mind stuffs away a little bit of funds during the good times to be safe during the bad times. Don't you know the good times, like rising home prices, continue forever and ever?
3/11/2009 6:10:53 PM
3/11/2009 6:21:24 PM
^^^, ^ Jesus Hussein Christ.In other news, the economy remains sound:
3/15/2009 1:56:21 PM
I'll agree with you that they attacked McCain for saying the fundamentals were sound. Ultimately, it seems to come down to which fundamentals people are talking about, and I guess you can fault the media outlets for not asking that question.Romer says right in her statement though
3/15/2009 2:00:36 PM
I figure this thread could use some humor:
3/25/2009 10:59:35 PM
son of a bitch, what the hell did NC do to take such a beating in the last year....
3/27/2009 2:42:39 PM
fuck, n/m[Edited on April 3, 2009 at 1:39 PM. Reason : .]
4/3/2009 1:39:04 PM
let's try some more charts (they didn't work last time)
4/8/2009 11:25:01 PM