Rynar wrote:
Savings are in no way a leetch. They are simply future spending. When enough future spending is realized, it indicates a prudent time for businesses to make investment.
That would indicate that the US is actually on a positive course, as the recession has caused personal savings to increase from -10% to about 5%. But this is also why the jobs we lost can never come back, with an effective 15% drop in consumer spending there can't possibly be any work for these people.
Vindicarre wrote:
X, no matter which way you try to spin it, the Government has no income other than taxpayer money.
Yes, I get that, that's why government spending is always bad in the long term, because
eventually taxpayer money has to be spent on the debts. But there's no reason it can't work in the short term.
Taskiss wrote:
X, if the government wants the taxpayers to have more disposable income, the most direct and appropriate way to achieve that goal is to not take as much from them in taxes as it does. No other machinations need be applied, were people to have more cash in hand, more would be spent.
However, that's not the liberal agenda. The agenda is monetary redistribution - to take it from those that have earned and give it to those that have not.
I don't really disagree with you there, my point was just that government spending can have a short-term benefit. Also the "liberal agenda" isn't straight wealth redistribution, the majority of "liberals" actually believe that the government can spend money more wisely than private industry. That's why you get support for things like public health care.