On Jan 1, 12:38 pm, Les Cargill <
lcargil...@comcast.com> wrote:
>
dagmargoodb...@yahoo.com wrote:
> > On Jan 1, 1:42 am, Les Cargill <
lcargil...@comcast.com> wrote:
> >>
dagmargoodb...@yahoo.com wrote:
> >>> On Dec 31, 12:18 am, Les Cargill <
lcargil...@comcast.com> wrote:
> <snip>
>
> > Well, that was for a (world) war, wasn't it, a temporary condition
> > that eventually stops?
>
> Has it stopped? I'm no peacenik, but we've managed to maintain a
> pretty high level of military force-availability since the end of
> WWII.
>
> When I see it, it looks a lot like Bismarck.
Well that's silly--of course it's stopped. Our car companies are
making cars, not tanks, we're not cranking out Liberty ships daily and
planes 24/7, we have far fewer men under arms, and in fewer places,
etc.
> > Today it's for nothing, not survival, and we're building these drags
> > on success into the daily cost of government. That's permanent.
>
> We're still successful, though. SFAIK, we just have a temporary
> demographic phenomenon. By, say 2040, that will have passed. And
> so will I, so...
The immediate situation is little to do with demographics, but a set
of permanent inefficiencies.
> > There's no world war that's going to end some day and suddenly reduce
> > this new impairment, or remove it as a permanent damper on economic
> > activity.
>
> There's not a great deal of evidence to support it being
> a permanent damper on economic activity.
Well, if you don't understand the theoretical basis that's certainly
the empirical fact, that's why we're growing so slowly, and ready to
sink slower. How can that not be? When the gov't increases its
burden on the people by ~25%, that makes a difference.
2/3rds of the federal budget is "direct payments to individuals,"
which perforce reallocates capital inefficiently all by itself.
> I've looked, and the thing that's sagging seems to be
> still just plain old demand. Survey data show that
> individual shop owners count top line as *the* problem,
> not taxes nor regulation.
>
> For what you're saying to be true, government spending would have to
> crowd out wages. If you can defend that idea in the open air,
> there's a Nobel in it for you, because... nobody else seems to
> be able to make a go of it.
You don't seem to have any appreciation for how distressed the people
are, despite the administration's continual, Orwellian saturation-
level advertisements of all their new "benefits." The lurch toward
socialism has terrified a client of mine--an escapee from same--
petrified, looking to leave the US, as we go through the progressive
suspension of economic and civil freedoms he went through decades ago.
Everyone seems either under, or afraid of some attack, even of basic,
First Amendment freedoms. Just look at Hobby Lobby, for example.
Tremendous effort is being devoted to hunkering down, ordinary people
trying to protect themselves from their government.
But, mood aside, lots more things have been centralized in Washington
D.C., in the hands of people who are far less efficient. That's the
nature of centralized, top-down, inflexible, intolerant control--it's
inefficient. It invests foolishly.
> > At bottom, Obama's thesis is that yelling at people and taking more of
> > their stuff makes them work harder and produce more, faster, rather
> > than discourages them.
>
> Heh. No, I think like most Progressives, he just thinks it falls from
> the sky, or doesn't think about it.
>
> Trouble is, it's not that insane a position. The marginal product of
> labor in absolute terms keeps going up. We just don't have any place
> to put what *is* produced at capacity.
The marginal product of labor does not go up passively, of its own
accord--you're extrapolating from a history that no longer applies.
It goes up from people investing, innovating, and taking chances that
they aren't taking today, thanks to hope and change.
> >>> We've recently gone from spending 19% of GDP to 24%. So, that
> >>> guarantees a deficit of ~4-5% of GDP, on top of what Bush had. That's
> >>> insane.
>
> We're probably well past making sense at this point :), but either
> some or a lot of the 4-5% (and perhaps more) is just banking system
> stuff that will not hit anybody's bottom line.
I believe that's an error that you're repeating here. It's real
money, money the federal government has spent, and now plans to spend
in perpetuity. The notion that it's all a financial shell game of no
consequence, I don't understand how you get there. If that's the
case, all governments should print quadrillions, everything's free,
and no one has to make anything.
> The rest is revenue
> shortfall from Der Recession.
>
> Er, I follow Menzie Chinn on Econbrowser, and (s)he does a pretty
> thorough analysis of pieces of this concept and it doesn't look like
> it's any of it real.
>
> I find that we can even disagree about this despair inducing.
Prepare to despair further--you have the causality absolutely
backwards. Numerically, we went from spending $2.7T in 2007 to $3.5T
in 2009, a 30% jump--we're spending a fortune.
Those policies, in turn, are /causing/ the extended recession, sucking
money from innovation and investment, terrifying risk-takers,
suppressing tax collections, jobs, and growth.
[...]
> The problem with the "buh Obama!" thing is that it looks too electoral;
> it looks like campaign rhetoric. I was far too disappointed in the
> "buh Clinton!" thing from the '90s and the "buh Bush!" thing from the
> last ten years.
That seems unreasonable. Which one of those other guys just
negotiated a tax increase (on top of Obamacare taxes), no cuts, and
even more spending, on top of trillion-dollar deficits? In the
campaign Obama spoke of $4 in cuts per $1 in new taxes--to reduce the
deficit--but the action he just took is to increase spending, increase
the deficit, and increase taxes. And, he wanted to spend even more.
Nor do I remember the other guys dogmatically insisting on class-
warfare, or that hiking rates on a few would pay for the whole, when
it's not even vaguely true.
http://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/obama-tax-rich
"Yet President Obama is seeking an additional $3.9 trillion in new
taxes over ten years, above the projected revenue growth discussed
above, and these new taxes still wouldn’t balance the budget.
Why not?
Because the president wants to increase spending even faster than he
wants to increase taxes. "
> Obama says one thing and does another. The thing he says is "Hope and
> Change"; the thing he does is ... not that. It's "cut".
>
> Besides, if the problem is SS and Medicare, then that's FDR and LBJ,
> and they're both no longer with us.... *general* government spending
> outside the security apparatus is very low...
I don't know what you mean by "security apparatus." It's social
programs that take up ~2/3rds of the budget, not infrastructure, not
defense.
For all the verbiage above it's not that complicated. We're growing
slower because there are new substantial, real, added financial and
regulatory burdens--and even threats--on everyone. All that bleeds out
of growth and investment, affecting jobs, and everything else. You
can't climb as quickly with an extra 10kg in your rucksack.
--
Best,
James Arthur