RangerDave wrote:
Talya wrote:
It is a bankrupt country with out-of-control spending, digging itself deeper into the hole every minute.
The US isn't bankrupt, though. Not even close. We're more than able to pay all our obligations at this point and for the next couple of decades, and the bond markets are quite happy to lend us more money at very, very low interest rates. Besides, the most worrisome line item is Medicare, which could be reformed, cut or even scrapped if we come down to the wire in 20-30 years. There's a medium-term budgeting issue here, not current or imminent bankruptcy.
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What would constitute a "fixed" system?
A long string of budgetary surpluses or balances.
Fair enough, but we were headed toward balance/surplus in the 90s without messing around with the debt ceiling.
Yup, and we're now in debt to the tune of $14,342,887,364,361.82 and counting, with
trillion dollar overspending the last couple of years, oh yeah, with record deficits.
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The debt ceiling doesn't stop Congress from approving expenditures that exceed revenues, it just stops the government from borrowing the money needed to make up the difference (assuming we've hit the ceiling at the time). That's part of the problem - the debt ceiling creates a disconnect between the budget Congress approves and the ability of the government to pay for everything in that budget, causing a financial/economic crisis.
Since Congress hasn't passed a budget in over two years it can't cause a financial/economic crisis right?
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If you want to force a balanced budget, the way to do that is with a balanced budget amendment or law, not by playing chicken with the debt ceiling. Otherwise, what you get is Congress ordering the food then skipping out on the bill and pretending that's "fiscally responsible."
I guess The Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Reaffirmation Act of 1987 and the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 have taken care of the problem then, right? Since Obama is so against a balanced budget amendment, there might be hope on that front, though the Senate failed on that today.
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Is it the only way? I think it's the only practical way. You're already paying too much tax. Raising it further will just lower GDP and likely lower the income you are trying to raise.
Taxes are at their lowest point in decades, and only the most dogmatic supply-siders argue (dishonestly, in my opinion) that raising them a bit would actually
lower revenues.
Tax revenue is nearly double that of the early '90's. Taxes are lower revenue is up.
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It doesn't matter where the cuts are made, with regard to fixing this. it does matter with regard to your country's operation, but ultimately, whether they're made militarily or through cutting of infrastructure or social spending, or just trimming the fat, it ultimately does the same thing. It needs to be done.
Again, fair enough, but it doesn't need to be done completely and immediately. The cuts can be made gradually and mixed with moderate tax increases. How do we know this? Because, again, we were headed in that direction in the 90s (i.e. before two wars and two major tax cuts), because a good chunk of our structural deficit is a population artifact related to the baby-boomers retiring, and because we have no shortage of willing lenders to make up the difference while we transition to greater balance.
Don't you mean 3-5 wars and record record domestic spending? As for "two major tax cuts", I supposed the fact that tax revenue being nearly double that of the early '90 in spite of a major recession/depression isn't enough to balance the budget, I guess with unemployment over 9%, the answer must be to raise taxes...
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Inflation that neither the markets nor most economists think is likely? I agree that just printing money willy-nilly would be a mistake, but when you're at 9% unemployment, with a significant debt load, and near-zero core inflation, sounding the alarm on inflation strikes me as an odd choice of concerns.
Near-zero? Neither markets, nor economists think inflation is likely?
CNBC wrote:
Manufacturing Gauge Slumps as Core Inflation Gains
...But stripping out food and energy, core CPI rose 0.3 percent after a similar gain in May and above economists' expectations for a 0.2 percent increase.
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"We are getting a very, very sharp rebound in core inflation and much more than the Fed had bargained for. We will be at price stability and possibly through it before the end of this year," said Eric Green, chief economist at TD Securities in New York.
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High inflation, driven by strong energy and food prices, undermined economic activity in first quarter, with growth slowing sharply to a 1.9 percent annual rate after a brisk 3.1 percent expansion in the final three months of 2010.
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Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said this week the U.S. central bank was prepared to act if growth falters further, but made it clear that the Fed is not at that point yet.
Bernanke noted that inflation was higher than in late 2010, when the Fed got ready for its $600 billion government bond-buying program, which ended in June.
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Overall consumer prices were up 3.6 percent from a year earlier, after rising 3.6 percent in May.
Khross wrote:
Ummmm ...
Am I the only person here who noticed that last month's jobs gains were revised to a net 90,000 loss?
Nope
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko