This is a question that I'm genuinely interested in and I think this is the place to ask.
10/28/2008 12:39:37 AM
you been watching SNL lately? you that old financial yelling guy that the Keenan/Kel plays?the one that yells FIX IT!that's what it would be like.
10/28/2008 12:55:38 AM
Watch more Saturday Night Live videos on AOL Video
10/28/2008 12:57:01 AM
really don't give a shit what his stupid ideas are
10/28/2008 12:58:05 AM
10/28/2008 1:07:57 AM
actually that is nothing like Ron Paul. I would say when he speaks he actually identifies what the problem is and then offers in a calm collective manner his idea for fixing it. RP would probably suggest that we stop printing new money and allow for the market to come and hit its eventual bottom fast. while it may be painful, it would be a very short lived moment of pain and financial stability could get on the upswing more quickly than will otherwise happen.
10/28/2008 10:31:31 AM
Here you go....
10/28/2008 11:19:15 AM
It'd be something like
10/28/2008 11:22:59 AM
I suspect Ron Paul if appointed supreme ruller would begin selling off foreign assets, selling off Federal lands, and laying off an army of government employees. He would hopefully also halt the growth of SS payments at present non-inflation adjusting levels. With this savings, he would cut taxes and begin paying down the federal debt. Some banks would go belly up, but others would take advantage of reduced regulatory hurdles to grow quickly and fill the void.
10/28/2008 12:33:15 PM
You mean after unemployment hit about 20% don't you?
10/28/2008 4:07:21 PM
IBTL
10/28/2008 4:33:12 PM
It is unclear how much of the current problem is being caused by regime uncertainty as firms hold onto bad assets as long as they can in hopes of getting a bailout. Electing a President which would eliminate the possibility of a bailout for at least four years would end that game with beneficial results. This is a financial problem. There is as yet no evidence to suggest the goods and service economy of the U.S. is misallocated. Except for SUVs, inventories are not building and non-financial profits are still high. As such, if we can get rid of the regime uncertainty, and therefore the structural uncertainty, any recession should be short. That said, while Ron Paul would reduce the uncertainty surrounding a bailout, it would impose uncertainty as the largest sector of the economy (government) begins downsizing.
10/28/2008 6:15:00 PM