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This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Plantagenet » Fri 01 Feb 2013, 20:27:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', 't')he very fact that GDP did not collapse as hard as it did in 1929 likely explains the tepid recovery.


Not really. The current recovery is clearly worse then all the other post WWII recoveries and those were also times the GDP didn't collapse as hard as it did in 1929.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', 'P')ersonally, I am glad that we did not crash as hard as the Great Depression, even if it involves a long period of stagnation.


At least you are admitting the current recovery is more like a "long period of stagnation" then a real recovery. :)
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby kublikhan » Fri 01 Feb 2013, 22:01:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'N')ot really. The current recovery is clearly worse then all the other post WWII recoveries and those were also times the GDP didn't collapse as hard as it did in 1929.
Yeah I answered this one before too:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', 'T')his recession is not like past recessions. Those were more inline with normal business cycles. This is a once in a generation deleveraging that happens after a nationwide asset bubble bursts. So looking at the Reagan recovery and reporting it's glowing surge in jobs is inaccurate. As is looking at the present unemployment and laying the blame at Obama's feet for the mess we are in. The ingredients for the asset bubble that burst were laid long before Obama's tenure, and the pain of that bubble bursting would have to be bore no matter who is in office. This recession is more like the Japanese asset bubble bursting, the Great Depression, etc. Not the Reagan recession. Apples and Oranges.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'p')arties are in agreement: The recovery of today is not like the recovery of 1983 and 1984. And that's true.

Reagan had an advantage over Obama: The recession of the early 1980s was caused by runaway inflation, which the Federal Reserve countered by hiking interest rates. When inflation dropped, the Fed lowered rates and a massive economic boom resulted.

The major causes of the recession that started in December 2007 were a banking crisis and housing bubble that exploded during President George W. Bush's final months in office. Plus, interest rates were already low heading into the recession. The damage to the economy was not easy to fix in the short-run, said Greg Valliere, chief political strategist at the Potomac Research Group. "We nearly fell off a cliff, and people have short memories. I think the threat to the country was far greater in 2008 than in the early 80s, which was a garden variety recession."

Another difference: With comparatively small debt loads, Reagan was able to push through a 23% across-the-board cut of individual income tax rates.
With revenue lower today, a tax cut of that magnitude is, according to Bosworth, something "we can't really afford anymore."
Obama entered the presidency with substantial budget deficits and an economy contracting at a rate of 6.7%.
Obama vs. Reagan: A tale of two recoveries


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '[')img]http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQCcB4KvUd6c6FUCDaEdQsuMpjjQJM3B1vT1U_xdDzjhWTURkvw[/img]
Now I want to watch Animal Farm again.....
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Plantagenet » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 13:39:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', ' ')looking at the Reagan recovery and reporting it's glowing surge in jobs is inaccurate.


Numbers are numbers and facts are facts.

When you compare the numbers the Obama recovery is worse then the Reagan recovery in terms of job creation and worse than the Great Depression and the post WWII recessions in terms of GDP growth. ON the bright side the Obama recovery has featured a great stock market, but in terms of GDP growth and job growth its not so good. In fact, the torpid GDP growth we see, including the stunning -.1% drop in GDP in Q4 2012 --- makes the post-2008 recovery the WORST RECOVERY EVER.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '[')img]http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQCcB4KvUd6c6FUCDaEdQsuMpjjQJM3B1vT1U_xdDzjhWTURkvw[/img]
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', 'N')ow I want to watch Animal Farm again.....


Orwell was a total genius. :)
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Outcast_Searcher » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 13:58:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', ' ')looking at the Reagan recovery and reporting it's glowing surge in jobs is inaccurate.

Numbers are numbers and facts are facts.

Those pesky numbers. What are the liberals and Obama-pushers to do re economic history (besides blaming George Bush of course)? Their strategy seems to be to laugh and mock any position that doesn't advocate more spending, more debt, and of course, the holy grail - far more government.
I see this on TV interviews with mind-numbing regularity. It must play well to much of their voting bloc.

If you can't use facts and figures and reality to make your point, use obfuscation and distort things. After all, if a huge propotion of your base is too ignorant to know the difference, what can go wrong?

...

The sad part of it is, BOTH parties use this sort of strategy. The left for economic policies (to drive their social policies - re. big government), and the right for just about everything else (big military, science denial, fighting personal freedoms which offend their religious sensibilities including the separation of church and state, and of course max profit and growth at ANY cost, including destruction of the planet. (Which for reasons which escape me, apparently "God" must approve of.))

...

Funny how the "facts" ALWAYS seem to happen to align to one's political agenda or beliefs, isn't it? No reality distortion going on though. :roll:

This is why I reject both major parties as batsh** in at least one major area, and became a libertarian. Of course, this is frowned upon, as now I'm an "evil nonconformist with weird ideas". So be it. 8)
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby dissident » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 14:06:18

What a silly debate. The US business elites shipped most manufacturing jobs abroad since the 1980s. Republican or Democrat presidents don't do jack sh*t to control this process. Numbers, what numbers? There is only inane, irrelevant partisan bitching here.

If you compare the US growth period after WWII it corresponded to manufacturing job growth. If you look at China's growth today you see the same thing. Low paying burger flipping service sector jobs are worthless.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby kublikhan » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 17:02:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dissident', 'T')he US business elites shipped most manufacturing jobs abroad since the 1980s. Republican or Democrat presidents don't do jack sh*t to control this process.
+1
I'm not happy with either party. Corporate profits have been been soaring while worker wages failed to keep up. Worker wages now make up the smallest share of GDP in US history. Pstarr said I'm a political virgin because I refuse to throw my lot in with either party. But I say both parties have failed us.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'J')ust four years after the worst shock to the economy since the Great Depression, U.S. corporate profits are stronger than ever.
In the third quarter, corporate earnings were $1.75 trillion, up 18.6% from a year ago, according to last week's gross domestic product report. That took after-tax profits to their greatest percentage of GDP in history.
But the record profits come at the same time that workers' wages have fallen to their lowest-ever share of GDP.
"That's how it works," said Robert Brusca, economist with FAO Research in New York, who said there is a natural tension between profits and the cost of labor. "If one gets bigger, the other gets smaller."

A separate government reading shows that total wages have now fallen to a record low of 43.5% of GDP. Until 1975, wages almost always accounted for at least half of GDP.

But overall economic growth has greatly outpaced growth in hourly wages and job creation since the end of Great Recession, so workers' share of the economic pie has dropped steadily.

the downward pressure on wages is hurting consumers' ability to spend, and thus the need for businesses to hire more people. "[Businesses] have a capacity to employ more people, but it makes no sense to hire more people until you have demand for your stuff," she said
Corporate profits hit record as wages get squeezed

Corporate short term profit interests are squeezing worker wages. With low wages, workers have less disposable income to spend into the economy. Less disposable income, less widgets getting bought. Less widgets, less sales. Less sales, less profits. This has been going on for decades. Borrowing let the game continue for awhile, but that is unsustainable long term. Now the chickens have finally come home to roost.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hirty years ago, CEOs of America's largest businesses earned an estimated 42 times as much as their average employee. These days, that number has jumped to more than 200 times as much, by many counts. Since the economic crisis of 2008, there has been much more focus on income inequality, not just from economists and social scientists, but also from politicians and from protesters who occupied Wall Street.

Income inequality is corrosive, Noah tells NPR's Neal Conan. "The affluent and the middle class really constitute two separate cultures now that are deeply alienated from one another," says Noah. "Even conservatives have started to recognize this."
What's Behind America's 'Great Divergence'
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Loki » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 19:03:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', ' ')Just to be clear here: The US is still deleveraging. When the US was still deleveraging in the Great Depression, our GDP was crashing hard. So to be fair, I would not even start to compare the "recovery" until this period of deleveraging is over.

Excellent analysis Kublikhan. I agree that we're not experiencing Great Depression conditions and that our situation is more akin to Japan, though a bit worse I think (higher unemployment, looser safety net, etc.). Five years ago I was expecting the Greater Depression, but so far what we have might better be termed the Lesser Depression. While our situation is less dire than it was in the 1930s, I think our ability to recover is far more constrained.

Also agree that there is still a lot of bad private debt to disgorge, and that it'll take a good decade or so to squeeze it out. The nature of the private debt is different, though, in the 1930s it was primarily industrial (companies that actually make things), now it's primarily financial (companies that shuffle electrons) and consumer (based primarily on real estate speculation). History rhymes, but it doesn't repeat.

The Fed et al have managed to even out this trough surprisingly well, but we'll see if their Great Experiment works out over the long term. My guess is malaise for the next 20+ years, punctuated by panics and recoveries, but trendline down. We'll have this conversation again in 2023, and maybe again in 2033 when we can make jokes about it being the '30s all over again.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Plantagenet » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 20:32:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', 'w')e're not experiencing Great Depression conditions


Clearly not. We've got a booming stock market instead of a collapsed stock market, and millions on food stamps instead of millions standing in breadlines.

But the beginning and end and depth and severity of a recession and the strength of post-recession recoveries aren't judged on the basis of the value of the S & P, or on how many people are dependent on food stamps (at all time record high right now, by the way). The beginning and duration and intensity and end of recessions and recoveries are judged entirely on just one objective factor----changes in GDP. And based on that objective data, the current recovery is so weak that we are in the WORST RECOVERY EVER---our GDP growth since 2008 has been even weaker then that which occurred after the crash of 1929.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', '.')..bad private debt ...private debt... the Fed et al have managed to even out this trough surprisingly well, but we'll see if their Great Experiment works out over the long term.


The common wisdom for most folks is that the 2008 crisis was a "debt crisis" and the slow recovery since is due to the large amount of "private debt" --or for folks in Europe the blame goes on the large amount of "government debt". Somewhat illogically, many of the people who blame the crisis on debt are the same ones who think the FED rescued the economy by creating even more debt with QE, or that TARP rescued the economy by bailing out banks, and that the way to future prosperity is for the Obama administration to create even more debt with never-ending trillion dollar deficits.

But there is small group of peak oil advocates (count me in this camp) and economists who think the 2008 crisis was triggered when global oil production peaked, and oil shot up to record highs. Similarly, we think the post-2008 sluggish growth in the EU and the USA since 2008 is due to continued high oil prices.

If we are right, then the Fed and the EU and the Obama administration can simultaneously talk about paying down private and government debt by creating more debt, and it won't bring back rapid GDP growth-----in fact, energy is so fundamental to the economy that as energy prices rise it will result in the current WORST RECOVERY EVER ending with a double dip recession, and the entire post-2008 period then being reclassified as an economic depression. 8)

Image
Since this feeble recovery began in mid-2009 the US economy has been experiencing the WORST RECOVERY EVER
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby kublikhan » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 22:29:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')irst, it is true by most reasonable measures that the Great Recession, which we are still recovering from, was the worst U.S. recession in 50 years. But U.S. history goes back much further, and there have been many worse recessions in our history, with much slower recoveries.

There are at least five other, earlier recessions where average output fell more than our recent recession and where real per-capita GDP remained below its previous peak more than five years out.

Does anybody remember the Panic of 1797? The Depression of 1815-21? The Recession of 1836-38? The post-Civil War recession? The Panic of 1873 and the resulting Long Depression? The Panic of 1893? The Panic of 1907? The Depression of 1921? The Great Depression? I doubt folks did their homework.

It is simply not true that this is the worst recovery in U.S. history. Since this economy hit bottom in 2009, economic growth has been positive but unimpressive, not enough to create the jobs needed for all those who lost their jobs plus those who enter the workforce each year. However, the economy will regain its previous peak in this quarter, a duration of less than five years.

This was the first “balance sheet” recession since the Great Depression, not the garden-variety recessions that most of us have experienced. The recession that began in 2008 was caused by a bubble in the housing market that burst a couple of years before and a financial crisis that left us on the edge of an abyss in the fall of 2008. As both the Great Depression and Japan’s lost decade show, recessions like this are almost always deeper and longer than most recessions, and much harder to recover from, no matter what the government does.

We need a debate over how best to lay the groundwork for future economic growth. We need, however, to stick to the facts and avoid unsubstantiated hyperbole disconnected from any real understanding of what has happened.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby kublikhan » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 23:30:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', ' ')Somewhat illogically, many of the people who blame the crisis on debt are the same ones who think the FED rescued the economy by creating even more debt with QE, or that TARP rescued the economy by bailing out banks, and that the way to future prosperity is for the Obama administration to create even more debt with never-ending trillion dollar deficits.
...
If we are right, then the Fed and the EU and the Obama administration can simultaneously talk about paying down private and government debt by creating more debt
Ever since 2010, the deficit and government spending have been shrinking. At the FASTEST RATE EVER. Sorry, couldn't resist :) The only time the deficit fell faster was the belt tightening in 1937, which as you well know caused a double dip recession. If we continue with further tightening , we risk the same thing happening now.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he government is hurting the recovery, and badly. But it’s not because it’s spending too much, or because of concerns over future policy. It’s because government, at all levels, is spending and investing too little. Despite the stimulus and various other policies we’ve passed to help the recovery, and despite the large deficits the government has been running, government spending and investment have, at all levels, been contractionary since 2010.

The new numbers the Bureau of Economic Analysis released on fourth-quarter economic growth have received considerable attention for the clear damage that falling government spending did to the economy. According to the BEA, “government consumption expenditures and gross investment” knocked 1.33 percentage points off the total change in economic growth. If government spending had just been neutral — that is to say, if it had neither contracted nor expanded — the economy would have grown by 1.23 percentage points rather than shrunk by 0.1 percentage points.

A big reason for this is cutbacks on the state and local level, which have been much larger than cutbacks at the federal level. In 2010, for instance, federal spending took 0.23 percentage points off GDP, while state and local spending took 0.43 percentage points off. As such, Washington often misses the overall contraction in government spending, as the bulk of that contraction has been at the state and local levels. But federal spending has been contracting too.

Economists expect that to continue. Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics projects the sequester alone will cut 0.5 percentage points off growth in 2013 if it’s allowed to go into effect. Add that to the expiration of the payroll tax cut and assorted other belt-tightening measures at the federal level and total fiscal drag, he says, is likely to be more than one percentage point of GDP in 2013 — a significant hit when total GDP growth isn’t expected to be above three percentage points.

So yes, the government is hurting the recovery. But it’s not because of deficits or uncertainty, or at least, it’s hard to find evidence for either theory. The real, provable damage the government has done to economic growth in recent years has been in cutting back on spending and investment since 2010.
Government is hurting the economy — by spending too little

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')elieve it or not, the federal deficit has fallen faster over the past three years than it has in any such stretch since demobilization from World War II. In fact, outside of that post-WWII era, the only time the deficit has fallen faster was when the economy relapsed in 1937, turning the Great Depression into a decade-long affair. If U.S. history offers any guide, we are already testing the speed limits of a fiscal consolidation that doesn't risk backfiring.

While long-term deficit reduction is important and deficits remain very large by historical standards, the reality is that the government already has its foot on the brakes. From fiscal 2009 to fiscal 2012, the deficit shrank 3.1 percentage points, from 10.1% to 7.0% of GDP.

Stimulus programs have come and mostly gone; the end of stimulus to states led them to enact Medicaid curbs; jobless benefits in recent months have fallen by 50% since early 2010.
U.S. Deficit Shrinking At Fastest Pace Since WWII, Before Fiscal Cliff
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby ralfy » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 23:36:30

What we are looking at are the effects of three decades of voodoo economics:

http://blogs.reuters.com/rolfe-winkler/ ... s-of-debt/

And more if one considers the Nixon shock:

http://wsws.org/en/articles/2011/08/pers-a15.html
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Loki » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 23:58:42

Whether this is the “worst recovery” or not is a red herring. Irrelevant except as a pedantic point for economic historians to squabble over.

This I think we can all agree on, the Great Recession is on par with the worst of the depressions in US history, though probably not the worst. I think something along the lines of the 1890s but not quite at 1930s level....yet. And I think everyone can agree that the “recovery,” however you want to define that, has been slow.

Yes, balance sheet recessions take longer to sort out than run of the mill recessions. But this time around we're facing real resource limitations, as well as major demographic challenges (paying for Baby Boom retirement being the most daunting in the US). "Laying the groundwork for future economic growth" will be exceedingly difficult. As I said before, history rhymes but does not repeat. We can learn from the past, but it shouldn't blind us to new conditions.

Japanese-style malaise for the next few decades is the best the US can hope for, I think. The mother of “slow recoveries”, I suppose. If that's what we get, and I hope that's all we get, doom will be a lot more boring than the hype would suggest. Getting poor slowly is pretty dull, but a lot better than “lights out” and “die off.” :lol:
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby kublikhan » Sun 03 Feb 2013, 00:14:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Outcast_Searcher', 'T')hose pesky numbers. What are the liberals and Obama-pushers to do re economic history (besides blaming George Bush of course)? Their strategy seems to be to laugh and mock any position that doesn't advocate more spending, more debt, and of course, the holy grail - far more government.
I see this on TV interviews with mind-numbing regularity. It must play well to much of their voting bloc.

If you can't use facts and figures and reality to make your point, use obfuscation and distort things. After all, if a huge propotion of your base is too ignorant to know the difference, what can go wrong?
The government is currently shrinking. And if you want to bring up George Bush, he greatly expanded government during his recession. By this much time into Bush's recession, government consumption and investment had expanded 12%. Yet under Obama and the liberals we are about back down to baseline.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 't')he report does highlight the role that shrinking government purchases of goods and services are playing in holding the economy back. And yes, I mean shrinking, not just growing more slowly than I’d like. government purchases of stuff — mostly at the state and local level, where the stuff in question includes hiring schoolteachers — has been in fairly rapid decline.

Here’s a comparison, using the BEA numbers, of the relevant numbers in the current business cycle and during the Bush-era recession and aftermath:
Image

By this measure, the era since the Great Recession began has been marked by unprecedented fiscal austerity.

How big a deal is this? Government consumption and investment is about $3 trillion; if it had grown as fast this time as it did in the Bush years, it would be 12 percent, or $360 billion, higher. Given a multiplier of more than one, which is what the IMF among others now thinks reasonable under current conditions, that ends up meaning GDP something like $450 billion higher, which is 3 percent — and an unemployment rate 1.5 points lower.

So fiscal austerity is the difference between where we are now and an unemployment rate not much above 6 percent. It’s a policy disaster.
Our Incredible Shrinking Government

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote(' Loki', 'W')hether this is the “worst recovery” or not is a red herring. Irrelevant except as a pedantic point for economic historians to squabble over.

This I think we can all agree on, the Great Recession is on par with the worst of the depressions in US history, though probably not the worst. I think something along the lines of the 1890s but not quite at 1930s level....yet. And I think everyone can agree that the “recovery,” however you want to define that, has been slow.

Yes, balance sheet recessions take longer to sort out than run of the mill recessions. But this time around we're facing real resource limitations, as well as major demographic challenges (paying for Baby Boom retirement being the most daunting in the US). "Laying the groundwork for future economic growth" will be exceedingly difficult. As I said before, history rhymes but does not repeat. We can learn from the past, but it shouldn't blind us to new conditions.

Japanese-style malaise for the next few decades is the best the US can hope for, I think. The mother of “slow recoveries”, I suppose. If that's what we get, and I hope that's all we get, doom will be a lot more boring than the hype would suggest. Getting poor slowly is pretty dull, but a lot better than “lights out” and “die off.”
+1
You summed it up very nicely.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby evilgenius » Sun 03 Feb 2013, 13:15:53

Don't underestimate the role of the health care fiasco situation in America when ascertaining the root causes of the crisis. Don't forget that the drop in worker's wages that fostered so much of the private borrowing was in large part brought on by the trend of employers tending to boost worker's wages in the way that was least expensive to them, via health care benefit increases over bottom line hourly or salary wage increases. The resultant artificial over real market to reach discovery over the cost of health care caused it to explode in price much faster than the rate of inflation in almost any given year. Add this to a prevalent meme in society against organization at the worker bee level, both at the management as well as the worker bee level, and you get what you get. If that didn't turn out bad enough technology has also forced people to change at a rate beyond that of previous generations, taking away the old 20 years to retirement doing that one thing that was always done backstop. Don't even get me started on the role of empire and the commensurate trappings which compel politicians to look toward mass bribery of the body politic because so much wealth is at their finger tips. All of this contributed to the mess that peaked when Joe Bob Six Pack had to face either paying the sub-prime mortgage or putting gasoline in the F-250 at $5 a gallon (thank God for all those plastic toys at Biglots with Christmas coming up and all). The causes of this mess run far more deeply than any one presidential term or cycle of party supremacy, decline and then supremacy again. The blame for this mess lies at the feet of the people.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Plantagenet » Sun 03 Feb 2013, 17:50:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', ' ') the Obama administration .. creating more debt
Ever since 2010, the deficit ... have been shrinking. At the FASTEST RATE EVER


Its nice that the Obama administration shrank the deficit from 1.6 trillion during Obama's first year in office in 2009 to 1.1 trillion during his fourth year in office in 2012, but the Obama administration is still creating over a trillion dollars in new debt every year. SO far Obama's debt totals over 5 TRILLION just for his first four years---with no end in sight to the trillion dollar deficits.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', 'T')he government is hurting the recovery, and badly.


Yes. Thats my point too. The current policies aren't working...they've resulted in the WORST RECOVERY EVER.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', 't')he expiration of the payroll tax cut and assorted other belt-tightening measures at the federal level and total fiscal drag, he says, is likely to be more than one percentage point of GDP in 2013 — a significant hit


Yup. It may have been foolish for Obama to push for all the tax increases because it will definitely hurt GDP growth at a time when we are already in the WORST RECOVERY EVER---we'll just have to see how big a hit GDP takes from the Obama tax increases going forward.

----------

Nice to see we agree on some things, Kublikhan. Have a GREAT WEEKEND!
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Plantagenet » Sun 03 Feb 2013, 18:48:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', 'W')hether this is the “worst recovery” or not is a red herring.


How are facts about the state of the US economy a "red herring?" You can pretend this isn't the WORST RECOVERY EVER if you like, but it doesn't change the facts or the significance of the data.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', 'T')his I think we can all agree on, the Great Recession is on par with the worst of the depressions in US history, though probably not the worst.


Yup. But lets think about this a bit more. Consider: (1) the US isn't the whole world, and (2) the current recovery is so weak that we can easily tip back into recession. As far as (1) goes, if you take the global view, the current recession in parts of the EU (i.e. Great Britain, Spain, Greece, Ireland, Portugal etc.) is WORSE than the 1929 Great Depression was---Britain is going into a TRIPLE-DIP recession, Germany* into a double-dip recession, and Greece never recovered at all. The crisis that started in Greece and spread to Spain may soon be nibbling at Italy and even France... And for (2) the Great Depression lasted 12 years---1929 to 1941, and so far we are only a bit into our fifth year of the current economic downturn and weak recovery -- i.e. it isn't over until its over.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', 'T')he mother of “slow recoveries”, I suppose. If that's what we get, and I hope that's all we get, doom will be a lot more boring than the hype would suggest. Getting poor slowly is pretty dull, but a lot better than “lights out” and “die off.”


Yes, thats my point. We are experiencing the "the mother of slow recoveries"---in fact the economic data show it is the WORST RECOVERY EVER. 8)

*Germany definitely was hit harder in 1929 then now, but as strong as it is now it is still being sucked into a double dip.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby kublikhan » Sun 03 Feb 2013, 23:47:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'I')ts nice that the Obama administration shrank the deficit from 1.6 trillion during Obama's first year in office in 2009 to 1.1 trillion during his fourth year in office in 2012, but the Obama administration is still creating over a trillion dollars in new debt every year. SO far Obama's debt totals over 5 TRILLION just for his first four years---with no end in sight to the trillion dollar deficits.
...
Yup. It may have been foolish for Obama to push for all the tax increases because it will definitely hurt GDP growth at a time when we are already in the WORST RECOVERY EVER---we'll just have to see how big a hit GDP takes from the Obama tax increases going forward.
You are talking out both sides of your mouth here Planty. On the one hand, you condemn the huge deficits. On the other hand, you argue for even larger defecits by keeping taxes low. So what is it you want:
A. large deficits and a growing economy
B. small deficits along with the pain that fiscal austerity brings
C. The chance to bash Obama at every opportunity you have

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'i')n fact the economic data show it is the WORST RECOVERY EVER.
Did you miss this one?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')here are at least five other, earlier recessions where average output fell more than our recent recession and where real per-capita GDP remained below its previous peak more than five years out.

Does anybody remember the Panic of 1797? The Depression of 1815-21? The Recession of 1836-38? The post-Civil War recession? The Panic of 1873 and the resulting Long Depression? The Panic of 1893? The Panic of 1907? The Depression of 1921? The Great Depression? I doubt folks did their homework.

It is simply not true that this is the worst recovery in U.S. history.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Plantagenet » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 03:00:34

A nice discussion of the WORST. RECOVERY. EVER.
the WORST. RECOVERY. EVER.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Postby Plantagenet » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 03:14:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', '[') On the one hand, you condemn the huge deficits. On the other hand, you argue for even larger defecits [sic] by keeping taxes low.


You don't understand how a balanced budget works----if the government only spends as much as it takes in with taxes, then you don't have large deficits. Check out this week's ECONOMIST magazine and its special section on the Scandinavian countries and their economic policies----the ECONOMIST shows that the economies of the Scandinavian countries are doing great because their deficits are tiny compared to the huge deficits that Obama is running---the deficit is only 0.3% of their GDP this year in Sweden, while in the USA Obama is calling for deficit spending equivalent to 7% of the entire USA GDP.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', '
')Does anybody remember the Panic of 1797? ....
It is simply not true that this is the worst recovery in U.S. history.


The panic of 1797 was certainly a significant downturn, but there really isn't very good data on GDP back in 1797 making it hard to compare with the current recovery. But we do know the current post-2008 recovery is weaker than the recovery we saw after the 1929 collapse, and weaker then any of the post WWII recoveries. 8)
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