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I haven't paid any attention to this because we've got enough problems with our economy alone, but it's telling that I thought this topic was going to be posted by one of the General Board trolls looking to stir up shit elsewhere for a change. Make of that what you will.
It was a failure because it was too little, too late.
Some of it is just ridiculous to begin with. Building tunnels for turtles and increasing the toad population. We could have given every man, woman, and child 2800 dollars. 14,000 dollars for a family of 5 overnight.
Nice topic.
I've tried to stay fairly informed on this and I honestly don't know how I feel one day to the next.
There's little doubt that we avoided even more serious pain than we are already dealing with, but it remains to be seen how this will play out in the future.
My feeling is that this will polarize people for a long time, and for this reason...
I think we chose between dealing with a VERY intense economic downturn for a shorter time, with more dramatic reconstruction giving birth to a renewed economy
vs.
mitigating the pain quite a bit but prolonging the recovery A LOT.
How you feel about those two options is going to depend a lot on your personal philosophy but also your financial situation and the industry you work in. Sort of like, the average depth of a river may be four feet, but that doesn't help a six foot man cross it safely if it's 20 feet deep at it's deepest point.
Does that make sense?
I'm trying to say that we made it possible for more people to survive the crossing, but it's going to take us, in my opinion, 5-10 times longer than it would've otherwise.
I'm still with the economists who were projecting about a year at outset.
I think once consumer credit starts to flow again and it will based purely on how spoiled and optimistic we are, a lot of this will soften.
The unemployed smart people I know are starting to get some interviews. Some have even gotten jobs.
WOEZ ME I AM GOING TO BE PAYORXXING 4EVAH - eh not so much. I can handle an uptick on my federal tax return far better than I can handle the profit-taking that the insurers are doing in panic at this moment. Fuck 'em.
You're losing me here.
A year for what?
There's no doubt that we're seeing some positive signs, or at least fewer negative signs, but the underlying factors that drive the US economy forward are nowhere to be found.
Wait until inflation comes, mark my words ladies and gents because I will be referencing this very thread when the day comes:
we will see double digit inflation at some point in the next decade,
Marquis has spoken.
but the underlying factors that drive the US economy forward are nowhere to be found.
Wait until inflation comes, mark my words ladies and gents because I will be referencing this very thread when the day comes:
we will see double digit inflation at some point in the next decade,
Marquis has spoken.
Interesting article about the whole ball of wax:
http://www.kyklosproductions.com/posts/index.php?p=85
"Briefly, as I said before, jobs and restoring consumption are the key."
I'm no economist, but yeah, what he said.
"Briefly, as I said before, jobs and restoring consumption are the key."
I'm no economist, but yeah, what he said.
However we're not going to be doing a giant Dust Bowl saga. It's just not going to happen like that - I don't think that's realistic. RR, you're supposed to be under 10 feet of water right now from some projections, you know.
Long story short, he thinks the bank bailouts will achieve nothing except to enrich the already rich. The money would be better spent putting people to work directly.
I've got my fingers crossed. We are going to be building those mega-flood control barriers at prevailing wage.
Lotta rebar in that shit.
My bad. A year for the average mortgaged and laid off middle-aged white collar smalltime to feel less pain in his life than he does at this point. I'm not looking at this like a macroeconomist, because my day depends on how many people choose to buy a small octopus shaped piece of brass for 20 bucks, and the answer is: enough.
Right. Or we can plug our ears and refuse to pass the debt to our children and the rich can move to higher ground and the poor will be happy to drown as long as their taxes don't go up one penny.
I think you know much more about this than I do, but I think if overeager fed-rate tinkering can be resisted this will not necessarily doom us to total 70's redux. They got way way way too happy to fuck with the fed rate.
What are the underlying factors driving the US economy?Where I sit, they're consumer credit, optimism, pixie dust, and foreign manufacturing. Battered, but ever present.
I also think everyone has this really funny Wall St. recollection of the 80's but forgets that they were actually pretty grim for a lot of people. Anyone here graduate and look for a job in the 80's? Does this feel deja-vu like?
Hey man, for all the water cooler conversation that this recession has given us, there are a lot of people who have dealt with more direct pain from Michael Jackson's death. Everyone knows someone who has been affected and most people know someone who know someone who has been ruined by it, but for a lot of people the "outrage" is purely intellectual and empathetic.
I on the other hand lost my awesome finance job following a shady government-abetted big bank takeover, owe considerably more on the home I own than it's worth and am drowning in debt totaling halfway towards 7-digits while searching for work in an industry that shed 20% of its employees in the last 52 weeks.
But that's all neither here nor there. What's going to really suck is when milk starts costing 5 bucks a carton and no one is floored by the awesome opportunities arising that compensate for that. God knows what gas is going to do. That's going to languish on for a while, hopefully some good music will be made during this time for us all to kick it with.
I don't know that I know much more about this than you do. I can tell you that I work with this every day and every day I hear something that surprises the hell out of me. I know many consultants with hundreds of millions of client assets under management who could probably surprise you with what they don't know, there is just A LOT to fucking know here and when speaking on such broad terms any persons opinion is as valid as any others.
I think all the underlying factors you listed are good, but what I still see missing is the ingenuity and the innovation, and quite frankly the happiness. American workers work too hard for too low a quality of life. I think we have 1/3 the average time off that they do in Europe, and what do we get in exchange for that? Bigger cars with bigger cup holders for our bigger sodas?
Don't people want more than that? I think they do.
And what have we done recently that's really fucking shit up? Where's the internet, where's the personal computer, where's the fucking flying cars?
A nation cannot live on iphones alone!
I disagree but I'm curious as to what the "underlying factors" are and why you think inflation's going to spike so. No sarcasm here, I'm genuinely trying to learn.
Also, this is why I hate discussing the economy. It hammers home just how little I really know.
Work doing what? That's why this energy revamp and toad highway shit isn't so freaking funny. You have to start *some*thing.