KingMamba
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I noticed your posts, you were good with your analysis.
Thank You.
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I noticed your posts, you were good with your analysis.
I understand it well enough. Spending cuts is a separate issue and am not talking about that. Am talking about taxes as motivator and discouragement to businesses and capitalism. A business make decisions affecting its survival regardless of whether the government enact spending cuts or not. May be it is YOU who do not understand this fact.Raising taxes for the 1% is only a part of the solution and only for the short term, because you can't even get the next budget balanced otherwise, with the result of a recession. That again means dramatic budget cuts and tax increases for everyone in the US as the only solution!
You still didn't understand that, like many in your country and that's the problem, because Americans are not used to think about the consequences of your behaviour.
Again, you have no choice but reduce the spending in the mid to long term to reduce the dept, while infrastructure and economy must be strengthened by the government on the other side. Simply raising taxes in a time where you have less people in jobs that can pay taxes and your economy is slowly coming back from the financial crisis is not a solution!
Are you joking? Restrictive regulations creates jobs?It creates jobs on the lower end, which translates into more tax payers as well, so more tax revenue without increasing taxes for all! It speeds up transportations and logistics, which makes your industies to be more effective and competitive compared to others in the world, that translates into better economy, which again means more more tax revenue without increasing taxes for all!
I knew it...!!! Instead of remaining on basic principles on taxes and incomes that affects all countries that engages in capitalism, you have to resort to convenient talking points and criticisms of specific US actions.Spending is not = spending, you have necessary spending and unnecessary spending! Spending billions for 2 useless wars, or for huge numbers of troops in countries where they are not needed anymore is unnecessary spending. Obama achieved more wrt getting those who were responsible for 9/11 in 4 years and with waaaaay less spendings, than the former government. Ending these useless wars and getting back the troops, reduces the spendings, which again helps to reduce the dept. While Romney wanted to do exactly the opposite!
The results of an education takes years to manifest while it takes only one or two years to know if a business will succeed or not. A recession is an emergency that no amount of spending on education or building roads can help. The economy was humming along quite well with the current infrastructure as it was. How long will it take a person to get out of poverty? How about a few months in a rising economy? When I got out of the USAF in 1992, I was very much in poverty in the middle of a good economy. I worked for Jiffy Lube at minimum wage and lived with my parents for a few months. You think I do not know what poverty feels like? But if I did not take steps to remedy my situation, I would have remained in poverty among busy and prosperous people.Improving the quality of living, by increasing health care and education budgets, improving infrastructure and reducing taxes for the lower and middle class on the other hand are necessary spending, especially when you were far behind in these fields in a global comparison, even behind many way less educated countries. That alone should make clear that the earlier policies of de-regulations didn't helped you, but made it even worse. Poverty increasing, education level droping, more industries loosing compared to foreign counterparts, more US companies moving production to foreign countries...
All this made America weaker, not stronger!
If you want to criticized deregulations, it would be intellectually honest to beg the question of who is AUTHORIZED to deregulate in the first place. Businesses cannot nullify laws or deregulate restrictions imposed upon them by someone else. Sob stories do not point fingers at the sources of deregulation. It was under Clinton that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were FORCED to buy mortgages that were questionably created under the noble intention of removing racial discrimination in the mortgage underwriting industry.Exactly and how was it possible that these people got these cheap loans, that normally never should have been granted? Because of your insanely de-regulated banking sector, that wanted to make more and more money, by selling more and more cheap loans and diverting these bad loans to other banks again. This bubble had to blow up someday, because everybody only took high risks and didn't thought about the consequences.
So you should blame those, that made these de-regulations possible, you should blame those bankers that got big bonuses when they sold poor people cheap loans, because these people are still living on the good side, because they didn't lost their homes, or have to suffer now and not those how were blinded by greedy bankers with "the american dream" that anybody can own a house!
Basically, the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston conducted a study of racial discrimination in the mortgage lending industry and concluded that there were racial discrimination. The study was found to be seriously flawed. But relaxation of lending criteria were enacted anyway.This study confirms the findings of the 1992 Boston Federal Reserve Bank report that revealed statistical evidence of mortgage discrimination in the Boston metropolitan area. Boston Fed researchers concluded that after controlling for all objective indicators of applicant risk, lenders still rejected minorities 56 percent more often than otherwise identical whites. However, the study has been criticized for miscoded data and omitted variables. This research used the data used by the Boston Fed and replicates their study to address each criticism in turn. This analysis shows that the Boston Fed data did contain miscoded or atypical observations but that data errors are not responsible for the negative race effect. This analysis also shows the omitted-variable criticism to be unsubstantiated. In fact, this research generated additional support for the finding of discrimination by comparing a subjective measure of credit risk with objective credit history determinants.