6/2/2009 5:05:18 PM
6/2/2009 5:16:37 PM
^^ From The New York Pravda.
6/2/2009 5:20:37 PM
Come on Dude we all know it was Clinton, the Liberals running congress these days, and Irresponsible Amuricans.If we had made George Dubya 'Supreme Chancellor for life' surely under the guidance of good conservative leadership we would already be out of the recession.
6/2/2009 5:24:56 PM
after reading the article the dude definitely hates Reagan, but he made some good points.The legislation in question allowed Americans who couldn't afford it, to take out loans they couldn't pay back. Combine this with the increased availablity of credit cards and its no wonder people are in so much debt.Theres plenty of blame to go around. The guy that wrote this would seem to have you believe that Reagans signing of this law forced a bunch of people to get loans they couldn't pay back. So whats a better idea? Allow people to get loans, even if they might not be able to afford them, or put up hard, government imposed limits for who can get what loans. Most people with public educations have no idea how personal finance works, so its probably a good idea to impose hard limits on who can get loans and credit cards until the populace can be better educated on their proper use.
6/2/2009 5:47:14 PM
[Edited on June 2, 2009 at 5:47 PM. Reason : a]
a[Edited on June 2, 2009 at 5:47 PM. Reason : a]
Now, I don't think anyone on this board can accuse me of not loving Paul Krugman.But this column is really just partisan mush.I mean he places the entire blame of Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act on Reagan and the Republicans??? huh?? #1 Last I checked, it takes two branches of government to make a bill into a law.#2 Fernand St. Germain, who sponsored the bill in the house (see his name in the bill's title), was a Democrat #3 the bill was also co-sponsored by many Democrats, including Charles Schumer#4 the bill passed 272-91 in the Democratically controlled House of RepresentativesSo how did all of the blame end up on Reagan's lap?? I am also at a loss as to why Krugman thinks this bill is so important for our current financial crisis. Its not even clear what part of the bill he's talking about, which is kinda important because much of it was changed after the S&L crisis. And weren't more recent pieces of legislation more important for our current financial crisis?? What about the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act which was signed into law by Bill Clinton in 1999?? Remember, it ended the seperation of commercial and investment banks?? Why does Garn-St. Germain matter more than that bill??? Krugman doesn't say.This column is just too vauge to be useful. Aside from Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act he doesn't mention any other pieces of legislation but hints that they are out there. He also assures us that they were all bad bills that can be associated with Regan and "his advisors". And if a Democrat ever supported those unnamed pieces of legislation, well better not to mention that. They clearly were taken in by those evil Republicans.*sigh* Remember when Paul Krugman wrote *good* columns?[Edited on June 2, 2009 at 6:42 PM. Reason : ``]
6/2/2009 6:13:13 PM
ZOMG hindsight
6/2/2009 6:14:24 PM
Wow, Paul Krugman takes a counter-factual view of history, blames Republicans, calls for regulation.Stop the presses.No seriously though, this is choice:
6/2/2009 6:46:06 PM
I have read a number of economists refer to the '90s Krugman and the new Krugman. The former providing intelligent, substantive commentary and the latter providing unsubstantiated, partisan jabs. Peter Wallison of AEI responds:
6/2/2009 9:54:35 PM
I save more than 10% of my income. I am very curious about this sort of thing. When these statements are made does that include 401k contributions, or is it only money that hits savings and/or money market accounts? When the national savings rate is reported does that include 401ks as well, or no? I ask because a savings rate of 0% seems impossible with those taken into account.Is there any data indicating how the savings rate has changed due to the recession?Thanks!
6/3/2009 10:35:31 AM
A Motherfucking Ronald Reagan statue was just unveiled at the Capitol Rotunda
6/3/2009 11:54:32 AM
^^ i believe the savings rate does take into account 401k, because the description I've found of it is basically "total payroll vs. total consumer spending". It's a very rough estimate, and it doesn't actually poll or question individual's spending habits. i think you would be surprised at the number of people who don't have 401ks or IRAs, or don't contribute to them even if they are available. Furthermore, there are probably people who do contribute to 401ks, and yet build up more credit card debt every month to cancel out their savings.
6/3/2009 11:59:48 AM
^ I am pretty sure you're right that contributions to 401ks are included, but an important thing to note is that the value of those 401ks are not considered. That is understandable since it isn't relevant to the question of what fraction of income the U.S. is saving. However, it is important when answering the question of how much U.S. citizens "should" be saving. I know that up until quite recently a lot of folks justified the low savings rate of U.S. citizens by saying that because the value of people's investments was rising so quickly (homes, stocks, etc) that people could afford to save lower fractions of their income. I don't know if thats changed.
6/3/2009 1:08:10 PM
Ronald Reagan statue unveiled in Capitol Rotundahttp://tinyurl.com/pr55yd
6/3/2009 1:20:55 PM
When i think of savings %; I think of....Savings %= total net pay - bills & utilities - loan payments - discretionary spending- misc expenses / net pay + 401k contribution*(1+effective tax rate) / (net pay)Although for younger people i think someone who does not save anything beyond their 401k is almost as bad as someone living from paycheck to paycheck. As savings is not JUST for retirement.What i'm curious is if money is still considered "savings" if i use it to buy new shoes this week, buy a video game next month, airplane tickets for vacation in 2 months, if i use it for a car payment next year, house imporvements in 3 years, kids college in 15 years. At what point is putting money in your savings account not "saving"[Edited on June 3, 2009 at 1:26 PM. Reason : L]
6/3/2009 1:22:30 PM
^^ yeah I already posted about the Reagan Zombie unveiled to suck the brains out of the lower class people who walk past him in the Capitol Rotunda
6/3/2009 1:26:36 PM
^ Are you referring to the bipartisan event that Nancy Pelosi orchestrated?
6/3/2009 1:38:25 PM
I lose what? I didn't say anything that had anything to do with Nancy Pelosi, or partisanship. You're a fucking idiot.
6/3/2009 2:49:38 PM
^ So, you're pro-Reagan?
6/3/2009 6:52:25 PM
tww libertarians/conservatives flip out over calls for regulation, insist market wasn't free enough and didn't allow for those amazing rational actors to take over and make the economy run, post articles from American Enterprise Institute while saying NYT is like a propaganda piece.Suppose I should also mention that Krugman hasn't been to keen on Obama's proposals for how to fix things.The ownership society was a bad idea, but the answer wasn't the stuff proposed by a swath of the DC establishment from Reagan to Rubin.
6/3/2009 7:20:53 PM
6/3/2009 7:36:55 PM
Reagan was a conservative republican version of Obama. Both used their charisma and public speaking skills to obtain lofty heights of approval from their followers (even if their views and policies are subpar are misguided); while the opposing side balks that they are screwing up America and awful politicians. In reality though both are somewhere in between.
6/3/2009 8:40:13 PM
I'm confused Socks''''? Didn't you rake me through the coals a few months ago for siting Krugmans take on the economy and the U6?
6/3/2009 8:58:48 PM
PinkandBlack, which counterarguments from the AEI do you disagree with?[Edited on June 3, 2009 at 9:12 PM. Reason : .]
6/3/2009 9:08:49 PM
6/3/2009 9:40:00 PM
6/3/2009 9:53:02 PM
6/3/2009 10:11:45 PM
Fail Boat. If I did, it was only because i thought Krugman overt partisanship had misled him once again. Not because I dont think he's awesome. http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=544281
6/3/2009 11:41:29 PM
6/4/2009 7:01:06 AM
6/4/2009 11:17:19 AM
6/4/2009 11:32:15 AM
6/4/2009 6:19:15 PM
6/5/2009 1:20:51 AM
come on... Nationalization was the first fucking option chosen this time.The free market usually only gets "ugly" when the gov't steps in and mucks shit up. Other times, a correction is a correction. There's nothing "ugly" about that.Finally, the gov't can't intervent and increase competition. It's kind of impossible for them to do that, because they are going to naturally favour one company over another, which is the antithesis of competition. See Fannie and Freddie.
6/5/2009 12:39:23 PM
6/5/2009 12:46:58 PM
6/5/2009 1:30:39 PM
with the forthrightness you display racism it makes it clear that you're basically trolling.
6/5/2009 1:37:37 PM
So what's the alternative to deal with LaQuonda? You think if we stopped the checks, she'd stop having babies? What kind of effect do you think this would have on crime rates? Isn't that the real reason for welfare: to keep whitey safe from poor black folks?Or will the free market just adjust to deal with people who don't get help and turn to crime?
6/5/2009 1:39:05 PM
6/5/2009 3:12:00 PM
With government intervention, we create welfare queens.Without government intervention, we create golden parachutes.Guess some people are just corrupt and any system will always be abused.
6/5/2009 6:30:15 PM
6/5/2009 6:34:23 PM
6/5/2009 7:09:39 PM
hey now, you know welfare is more than just broke people with cable and rimsit's abandoned buildings and property collecting checks for business expenses with no intention of ever being developed
6/5/2009 7:23:36 PM
6/5/2009 8:57:14 PM
^^true
6/5/2009 9:19:53 PM
6/7/2009 10:50:30 PM
Liberal news magazine makes the exact same complaints about Krugman's article that I made:
6/8/2009 8:31:36 PM
set em up
6/8/2009 9:42:07 PM