Enjoy.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Gee do ya think? Note the slogan: http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9842Flaming_Maniac wrote:
The original video would have been a lot more enjoyable if it was more balanced than CameronPoe after 6 hours in a pub.
I understand, but you are more persuasive if you can make people think the middle of the road is on the far left or the far right.Kmarion wrote:
Gee do ya think? Note the slogan: http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9842Flaming_Maniac wrote:
The original video would have been a lot more enjoyable if it was more balanced than CameronPoe after 6 hours in a pub.
Or maybe you missed the part where he said he was from the Cato institute.
Well, more libertarian than anything else. I would not call them far right. Especially considering the fact that the far right advocates excessive spending now also.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
I understand, but you are more persuasive if you can make people think the middle of the road is on the far left or the far right.Kmarion wrote:
Gee do ya think? Note the slogan: http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9842Flaming_Maniac wrote:
The original video would have been a lot more enjoyable if it was more balanced than CameronPoe after 6 hours in a pub.
Or maybe you missed the part where he said he was from the Cato institute.
There are things I disagree with Paul on, but yes, I support a free market with oversight.Kmarion wrote:
Well, at least Friedman was based around an economy that actually produces something..lol.
Your hero would certainly side with Friedman. You know, you can have a free market with oversight.
Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-12-24 09:09:09)
Who provides said employment? Government bonds are sold to pay for a massive ramp up in manufacturing output. So sometimes Keynes can work, sometimes it can't. Identifying what makes the crucial difference would be interesting. The real question is "How can we best expedite the movement of idle capital?".Kmarion wrote:
Wars and natural disasters are great employers.
Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-12-24 10:35:18)
At home the unemployed replaced nearly a half million jobs. That increased consumer spending which generated more jobs. Those serving were living a meager life. While they might have been employed, they had little in the way of luxuries.. they could even be considered homeless. You just replace one segment of the population with the impoverished. That's if they weren't killed or disabled. Forced job abandonment and population thinning isn't what I would consider ideal.CameronPoe wrote:
Who provides said employment? Government bonds are sold to pay for a massive ramp up in manufacturing output. So sometimes Keynes can work, sometimes it can't. Identifying what makes the crucial difference would be interesting. The real question is "How can we best expedite the movement of idle capital?".Kmarion wrote:
Wars and natural disasters are great employers.
The US entered WWII at the end of 1941. In the preceding eight years FDR's administration had reduced unemployment by some 12.6%. Of course it could be argued that leaving things to their own devices might have made for a faster rate of reemployment.Kmarion wrote:
At home the unemployed replaced nearly a half million jobs. That increased consumer spending which generated more jobs. Those serving were living a meager life. While they might have been employed, they had little in the way of luxuries.. they could even be considered homeless. You just replace one segment of the population with the impoverished. That's if they weren't killed or disabled. Forced job abandonment and population thinning isn't what I would consider ideal.CameronPoe wrote:
Who provides said employment? Government bonds are sold to pay for a massive ramp up in manufacturing output. So sometimes Keynes can work, sometimes it can't. Identifying what makes the crucial difference would be interesting. The real question is "How can we best expedite the movement of idle capital?".Kmarion wrote:
Wars and natural disasters are great employers.
Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-12-24 11:06:39)
We were already turning up production by 1939 in support of our allies. This undoubtedly had an immediate impact on employment rates.CameronPoe wrote:
The US entered WWII at the end of 1941. In the preceding eight years FDR's administration had reduced unemployment by some 12.6%. Of course it could be argued that leaving things to their own devices might have made for a faster rate of reemployment.Kmarion wrote:
At home the unemployed replaced nearly a half million jobs. That increased consumer spending which generated more jobs. Those serving were living a meager life. While they might have been employed, they had little in the way of luxuries.. they could even be considered homeless. You just replace one segment of the population with the impoverished. That's if they weren't killed or disabled. Forced job abandonment and population thinning isn't what I would consider ideal.CameronPoe wrote:
Who provides said employment? Government bonds are sold to pay for a massive ramp up in manufacturing output. So sometimes Keynes can work, sometimes it can't. Identifying what makes the crucial difference would be interesting. The real question is "How can we best expedite the movement of idle capital?".
33-37 - very much pre-war - 10.6% reduction. I have no idea what happened in 38 but of course when the war kicked in then why would the government feel the need for the WPA to remain: it should only ever have been a stop gap measure. Neither you nor I can probably comprehend what a country with 24.6% unemployment must feel like. And let's not forget the primary reason for the crash - speculation on the open market, insupportable self-reinforcing popular confidence and poor lending practices (it sounds quite familiar). If the free market was left to its devices those without jobs would have to be fed from the public trough while the market picks up - one might as well have them build infrastructure into the bargain.Kmarion wrote:
We were already turning up production by 1939 in support of our allies. This undoubtedly had an immediate impact on employment rates.
1933 24.9
1934 21.7
1935 20.1
1936 16.9
1937 14.3
1938 19.0
1939 17.2 <-- War begins
1940 14.6 <--
1941 9.9 <--
1942 4.7 <--
1943 1.9 <--
1944 1.2 <--
1945 1.9 <-- War ends
Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration (The largest employer in his new deal) was actually shut down because the War boom proved to be a greater source of employment. It was deemed unnecessary.
Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-12-24 12:16:45)
That is a reality no one want's to face. I am not a proponent of eliminating a safety net. But I do not think that my government can influence and create enough jobs to sustain a population of 300+ million. I believe they can impede the natural trends of growth though.If the free market was left to its devices those without jobs would have to be fed from the public trough while the market picks up
Ok, call me when there is a government with enough balls to tell their people to wait it out and things will be better in the long run. Then I'll listen.Kmarion wrote:
The goal is to create sustainable jobs. We went back into a recession in 1937. With unemployment sitting previously at 25 percent it had little choice but to go up. The goal is to create sustainable jobs. It is important to look at the quality of employment also. From what I've seen those government created jobs were well below the national average at the time. Granted I am sure it helped immediately.That is a reality no one want's to face. I am not a proponent of eliminating a safety net. But I do not think that my government has the capacity to influence the economy enough jobs to sustain a population of 300+ million. I believe they can impede the natural trends of growth though.If the free market was left to its devices those without jobs would have to be fed from the public trough while the market picks up
I understand the obvious desire to sugar coat it.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Ok, call me when there is a government with enough balls to tell their people to wait it out and things will be better in the long run. Then I'll listen.Kmarion wrote:
The goal is to create sustainable jobs. We went back into a recession in 1937. With unemployment sitting previously at 25 percent it had little choice but to go up. The goal is to create sustainable jobs. It is important to look at the quality of employment also. From what I've seen those government created jobs were well below the national average at the time. Granted I am sure it helped immediately.That is a reality no one want's to face. I am not a proponent of eliminating a safety net. But I do not think that my government has the capacity to influence the economy enough jobs to sustain a population of 300+ million. I believe they can impede the natural trends of growth though.If the free market was left to its devices those without jobs would have to be fed from the public trough while the market picks up
No, sugar-coating it is when you tell the people it's not that bad so the most simple-minded of the bunch will shut the fuck up. What the government does in response to all the whining is cover the economy in pillows before sending it off to the school of hard knocks, softening the blows but ultimately defeating the purpose.Kmarion wrote:
I understand the obvious desire to sugar coat it.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Ok, call me when there is a government with enough balls to tell their people to wait it out and things will be better in the long run. Then I'll listen.Kmarion wrote:
The goal is to create sustainable jobs. We went back into a recession in 1937. With unemployment sitting previously at 25 percent it had little choice but to go up. The goal is to create sustainable jobs. It is important to look at the quality of employment also. From what I've seen those government created jobs were well below the national average at the time. Granted I am sure it helped immediately.
That is a reality no one want's to face. I am not a proponent of eliminating a safety net. But I do not think that my government has the capacity to influence the economy enough jobs to sustain a population of 300+ million. I believe they can impede the natural trends of growth though.
Is that Obama? Even a conservative like myself believes that maybe this is what our country needs right now...someone so popular and appealing willing to tell 'the people' something so unpopular. Its going to be expensive, I know...I mean look at what Bush is agreeing to with these bailouts with no accountability with the money (i.e. giving $25 billion to Bank of America only to have them lay off 35,000 employees a few weeks later).It's paradoxical that you need someone with the most popular appeal as possible to tell the people something that's neither popular nor appealing.
What is your suggestion Kmar? Is your suggestion for everyone to sit out the next 2 years or so of economic activity? How fast does a lumbering thing like 'the global free market' take to respond to crises? There will be a cost in terms of social unrest - just look at Greece or poor suburbs of Paris: you reach an instability point where everything unravels. What will happen in Detroit? What is your suggestion? Everyone that is currently being forced out of employment en masse will have to be supported, possibly even in the medium term. That is a political reality. Or do you think otherwise?Kmarion wrote:
The goal is to create sustainable jobs. We went back into a recession in 1937. With unemployment sitting previously at 25 percent it had little choice but to go up. The goal is to create sustainable jobs. It is important to look at the quality of employment also. From what I've seen those government created jobs were well below the national average at the time. Granted I am sure it helped immediately.That is a reality no one want's to face. I am not a proponent of eliminating a safety net. But I do not think that my government can influence and create enough jobs to sustain a population of 300+ million. I believe they can impede the natural trends of growth though.If the free market was left to its devices those without jobs would have to be fed from the public trough while the market picks up
Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-12-24 13:22:53)