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This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

A forum for discussion of regional topics including oil depletion but also government, society, and the future.

Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Outcast_Searcher » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 04:06:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', 'T')he 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.

So you quote a citation free NYT article by "there can NEVER be enough government spending" liberal Paul Krugman, who picks the figures he deems relevant, but doesn't define them -- and this is your case for government shrinking? At least he makes it clear he's mixing in multiple forms of government (including state and local).

I'll certainly agree that Bush spent FAR too much and was a screw-up. Are we STILL playing the "it's all George Bush's fault" card, or is there EVER going to be a time when Obama will man up and take some responsibility for his policies? (I know the answer -- it's a rhetorical question).

I'm talking about federal spending. We're up from about 18% of GDP to about 25% and the liberals still want more. There are more and bigger social programs like food stamps, bailout programs, housing assistance programs, Obamacare (and all the new taxes to pay for it), and endless new regulations which are thousands of pages long and will take years to figure out and fully implement (just to name a few examples). And we have $5 trillion plus in new debt and no end in sight to $trillion plus annual deficits under Obama.

But "government is shrinking". Sure. Only a liberal could say that with a straight face.

I guess with that kind of definition, government should outright be disappearing any time now. :roll:

(Give me a break).
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

Unread postby evilgenius » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 13:06:21

I'm trying to bring this discussion round to talking about some of the long term problems that underlie the current malaise. Several people want to poke fingers at current attempts to fix things without referencing any context other than ideology. I want people to understand that even if it could be fixed with ideology there are some long term problems that, should they go unaddressed, will eventually bring us back here again.

That being said, this is a truly pale recovery. It is so because of lack of growth. The growth is slight because people don't have money to spend. There are various immediate reasons why that might be so; fear, income, demographic changes, level of government spending, level of public sector lending, etc. Then there are the long term reasons; healthcare's drain on disposable income and its role as pressure release valve vis a vis employee demand for higher wages, the role of management increasingly as gods over corporations rather than another caste of employee, the something for nothing mentality of a populace imbued with the spirit of empire, the political game of bribery of the public over statesmanship and civic responsibility inherent to democracy due to the role of money in politics, the role of peak oil as a population continues to look upon the world resources scene with an outlook that borders on deliberate blindness, and a whole lot more! You can waste your time thumping Obama and Bush or you can begin to talk about what is really wrong with America. You stall and jive your way to the status quo, feeling pretty good about yourself for having denigrated the powers that be and saved us from your own personal conspiracy theory, or you can start to talk about what is wrong with us, yes us, not some other group. The people have brought this upon themselves and only the people can get themselves out of it.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby kublikhan » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 14:38:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'Y')ou 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.
Whoa! You are promoting the social democracies in Europe as a model for what we should be following? Countries which have some of the highest tax rates in the world? My jaw is bruised from hitting the floor. I accept your proposal. <end discussion>

Outcast_Searcher, since others have been complaining about the constant ideology sparring going on I suggest we table this.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('evilgenius', 'I')'m trying to bring this discussion round to talking about some of the long term problems that underlie the current malaise
Well to get the ball rolling on this discussion, let me list 2 issues and possible solutions:
1. Deleveraging from decades long debt bing(if you want to delve into what caused this that is a rather long discussion in itself)
2. Peakoil/High oil prices acting as a drag on the economy

As to suggestions on how to fix it, for the first one I would say let the deleveraging run it's course. We need to let the bad debt get cleared out of the system. Recessions have a wonderful way of restoring reality to the system, even if they are a bit of a blunt instrument to accomplish the task. Once that is accomplished, we still have other under lying problems in the system to be fixed like low worker wages, money in politics, etc.

For peakoil, I think an accelerated mitigation program would be helpful.

For transportation:
1. much higher mileage on new vehicles. The US has made some improvements in this area but continues to lag Europe and Japan.
2. more mass transit encouraged. Again, some progress in this area but more needs to be done.
3. Car pooling
4. Alternatives to motor vehicle transportation like telecommuting, biking, etc.
5. EVs are still too expensive IMHO to be economical, but with battery prices projected to continue falling, this could become a valid alternative as well

For heating:
1. accelerate the transition away from heating oil. Install natural gas lines would be my first thought here. I am not sure if cold weather heat pumps are any good but Maine's current pilot program could help answer that question.
2. Increase efficiency programs: insulation, high efficiency furnaces, etc

For petrochemicals:
1. Use natural gas instead. Natural gas is dirt cheap in this country and makes an excellent alternative to oil for petrochemicals.

For electricity generation:
1. Stop burning oil to generate electricity. There are better alternatives available. Wind, natural gas, and solar come to mind.
The oil barrel is half-full.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby kublikhan » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 15:42:53

Oh I forgot one for transportation: moving long haul freight off our highways and onto rail. Here's an article on this topic of oil mitigation options:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')ne big-picture thing that's worth pointing out is that our crude dependency isn't just a question of our love affair with gas-guzzling SUVs.

As it turns out, passenger travel—planes and cars, mainly—only accounts for 47 percent of our oil use. This is probably the trickiest item to fix and needs to be attacked from a whole bunch of different angles: ratcheting up CAFE standards, rolling out electric cars, bolstering mass transit, developing alternative fuels like clean diesel or some sort of futuristic and actually sustainable biofuel, plus smart-growth measures that can reduce the number of miles people need to drive in the first place.

But that's only half of it. There's a lot of other oil use out there that may be easier to tackle in the short run. About eight million buildings, mostly in the Northeast, use oil for heating, and this accounts for 15 percent of the country's crude consumption. Renovating these buildings so that they can get their heat from natural gas or electricity would be a worthy endeavor. And there's no good reason why we should still be burning oil to generate electricity during peak-demand times—smarter grids or even solar power could help whittle that down.

Then there's freight, another 18 percent of oil use. I've noted before that it makes an enormous amount of sense to shift a good portion of freight from long-haul trucks to rail, especially electrified rail. As Philip Longman detailed in this Washington Monthly piece, moving 85 percent of the trucks off the road would U.S. curb oil use by as much as 22 percent while boosting the economy 13 percent by 2030 (thanks to better efficiencies), and lead to fewer traffic accidents and less congestion. What's not to love?
There's More To Oil Use Than Massive SUVs
The oil barrel is half-full.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Plantagenet » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 16:02:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('evilgenius', 't')his is a truly pale recovery. It is so because of lack of growth.


Yup. Thats my point. The data show this is the WORST RECOVERY EVER.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('evilgenius', 'T')he growth is slight because people don't have money to spend.


This is true for most folks. The middle class has been gutted----their average wealth has dropped by something like 40% over the last four years as housing values plummeted and may lost jobs and only been able to find low paying part-time Mcjobs. At the same time the prices of everything ---taxes, healthcare, gas for the SUV, college for the kids---is going up.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('evilgenius', ' ')There are various immediate reasons why that might be so; fear, income, demographic changes, level of government spending, level of public sector lending, etc. Then there are the long term reasons; healthcare's drain on disposable income and its role as pressure release valve vis a vis employee demand for higher wages, the role of management increasingly as gods over corporations rather than another caste of employee, the something for nothing mentality of a populace imbued with the spirit of empire, the political game of bribery of the public over statesmanship and civic responsibility inherent to democracy due to the role of money in politics, the role of peak oil as a population continues to look upon the world resources scene with an outlook that borders on deliberate blindness, and a whole lot more!


My bet is on peak oil. You are right that people "look on the world resources scene with an outlook that borders on deliberate blindness"--- energy prices have quadrupled in the last 13 years and GDP growth is now very difficult and the government and people all still expect "business as usual" will return eventually. What is actually happening is that we are experiencing the WORST RECOVERY EVER, which is just the beginning of Kunstler's "Long Emergency." 8)

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the WORST RECOVERY EVER is just the beginning of Kunstler's "Long Emergency."
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Arthur75 » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 19:29:04

lol, maybe this recovery isn't very strong
How about WORSE than previous ones ?
What ? All of them ? :shock:
Maybe not, no ?
Any of them ?
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Buddy_J » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 20:09:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Arthur75', 'l')ol, maybe this recovery isn't very strong
How about WORSE than previous ones ?
What ? All of them ? :shock:
Maybe not, no ?
Any of them ?


It is as bad as a recovery can be, and still be mistaken for "recovery". The most likely explanation is the incompetent political leadership of the country, starting at the top of course.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby peripato » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 20:48:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Arthur75', 'l')ol, maybe this recovery isn't very strong
How about WORSE than previous ones ?
What ? All of them ? :shock:
Maybe not, no ?
Any of them ?


It is as bad as a recovery can be, and still be mistaken for "recovery". The most likely explanation is the incompetent political leadership of the country, starting at the top of course.

Well there is no *recovery*. There is an expansion of debt, inflation, continued currency debasement and a lot of low-paid jobs, with a DOW that in gold price terms is actually half the value it was the last time it was at 14,000.

You can't have a recovery if your economy is increasingly going the way of Zimbabwe's. Imagine come the next crunch, if this is the best *recovery* your political and financial shenanigans can buy?
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Buddy_J » Mon 04 Feb 2013, 23:16:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '
')It is as bad as a recovery can be, and still be mistaken for "recovery". The most likely explanation is the incompetent political leadership of the country, starting at the top of course.

Well there is no *recovery*.


Well, certainly some would confuse a growing GDP with recovery, and might confuse it so well they are driving up home sales, buying new cars, etc etc.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '
') There is an expansion of debt, inflation, continued currency debasement and a lot of low-paid jobs, with a DOW that in gold price terms is actually half the value it was the last time it was at 14,000.


Sounds like BAU, no doubt about it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '
')You can't have a recovery if your economy is increasingly going the way of Zimbabwe's. Imagine come the next crunch, if this is the best *recovery* your political and financial shenanigans can buy?


Well, "going the way of Zimbabwe" ...not quite yet. But the Prez, he sure is tryin' awful hard.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby peripato » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 04:02:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '
')It is as bad as a recovery can be, and still be mistaken for "recovery". The most likely explanation is the incompetent political leadership of the country, starting at the top of course.

Well there is no *recovery*.


Well, certainly some would confuse a growing GDP with recovery, and might confuse it so well they are driving up home sales, buying new cars, etc etc.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '
') There is an expansion of debt, inflation, continued currency debasement and a lot of low-paid jobs, with a DOW that in gold price terms is actually half the value it was the last time it was at 14,000.


Sounds like BAU, no doubt about it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '
')You can't have a recovery if your economy is increasingly going the way of Zimbabwe's. Imagine come the next crunch, if this is the best *recovery* your political and financial shenanigans can buy?


Well, "going the way of Zimbabwe" ...not quite yet. But the Prez, he sure is tryin' awful hard.
Well, sure, those with vested interests in the status quo and the wilfully ignorant (sounds like 99.7% of the population?) might mistake a crack-induced *recovery* where the creation of new debt by the Fed. is the only real industry, rather than an expansion in goods and services leading to a real recovery, driven organically from individual savings and capital investment, with proper well-paid jobs, but - oh, never mind...

I'll just wait for the next crunch for everything to turn really batshit crazy this time...got popcorn?
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Loki » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 17:12:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ell there is no *recovery*. There is an expansion of debt, inflation, continued currency debasement and a lot of low-paid jobs, with a DOW that in gold price terms is actually half the value it was the last time it was at 14,000.

You can't have a recovery if your economy is increasingly going the way of Zimbabwe's. Imagine come the next crunch, if this is the best *recovery* your political and financial shenanigans can buy?

Despite our current stagnation, there has been a bit of a bounce back up from the bottom we hit in 2009-10; whether it's a genuine recovery or a dead cat bounce has yet to be determined. Unemployment is my main metric for this, not GDP or the stock market, though both also show improvement since we hit bottom.

And valuing the DOW by referencing the price of gold doesn't seem like a particularly useful method to me. Current gold prices are being driven by Asian demand, not US “currency debasement”; the vast majority of the newly printed US dollars have not entered circulation, and even if they did, it would likely just cause run of the mill inflation, not Zimbabwe-style hyperinflation.

Those who are focused on hyperinflation clearly don't understand the nature of this recession. It's a balance-sheet recession, which means it was caused by excessive private debt. It is overwhelmingly deflationary in nature. The Fed has been pulling out every stop to prevent deflation, and they've succeeded surprisingly well, so far at least. But I agree with Kublikhan that the only solution to a balance-sheet recession is deleveraging, which has only just begun. As soon as we see fedgov austerity really kick in, and it will when the GOP gains full control of Congress in 2014, we'll see a tsunami of private deleveraging in the US, just like we did in 1937, and just like Japan did 60 years later.

Australian economist Steve Keen recently addressed this:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s arguably the heretic-in-chief, my key proposition has been that this crisis was driven by a fundamental change in the behaviour of private debt. Every post-WWII recession has ended when private debt started to grow more rapidly than GDP – and in a trend that was ultimately unsustainable. I and a handful of others punted that this crisis would be the one where that unsustainable trend broke down, and a process of deleveraging would commence akin to that which caused the Great Depression.

The debt data now confirms that so far, that punt has proved correct. Some asset market development might yet temporarily reverse the trend – rising house prices in the US could conjure a return to leveraging by the household sector, for instance – but it appears that while actual deleveraging has been constrained, the days of private debt rising faster than GDP are over. Certainly, there has been no other post-WWII period in which private debt to GDP levels have fallen for as long as they have since the late 2000s.

Figure 4: Debt to GDP over the long term in the Anglo-Saxon economies
Image

This is also why economic growth hasn’t recovered to pre-crisis levels: because the rate of growth of private debt hasn’t recovered. This is both a good and a bad thing. It’s good, because that rate of growth of debt relative to income wasn’t sustainable anyway: debt can’t indefinitely grow faster than income, and the period which we took as normal was in fact an abnormality that had to end. It’s bad, because with private debt now stagnant, economic growth will be too because – up to a point – a capitalist economy needs rising private debt if it is to grow....

In these circumstances, it’s – pardon the pun – depressing that politicians continue to obsess about rising government debt. Far from being the cause of the current malaise, as they seem to believe, the cash flow that government deficits inject into the economy is the only factor that is keeping private sector economic activity ticking over, and dissuading the private sector from deleveraging. I don’t see deficits to counter private sector deleveraging as either the sole or the ideal solution – private debt should be directly reduced as well – but reducing deficits via the fetish for government surpluses risks generating a modern version of the "Roosevelt Recession" by triggering private sector deleveraging in earnest.

The US was the only Anglo-Saxon country to experience outright private sector deleveraging in the crisis, with private debt falling from a peak of $US42.3 trillion in January 2009 to $38.9 trillion in June 2010. Since then it has flatlined – it was $38.8 trillion in September 2012. The danger of which politicians on both sides of the House are blithely ignorant is that attempts to reduce the government deficit – and thus slow the rate of growth of government debt – could cause the private sector to return to deleveraging again. Rather than stimulating the economy by getting the government out of the way, “fiscal consolidation” could renew “private consolidation” and push the economy back into recession, as it did in 1937.

http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs. ... nt&src=sph


I tend to be more sanguine about reducing public expenditures than Keen, real deleveraging can't happen until we get a cold dose of austerity. But it's gonna hurt :wink:
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Beery1 » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 17:30:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', 'W')ell, "going the way of Zimbabwe" ...not quite yet. But the Prez, he sure is tryin' awful hard.


Yeah, like Romney would have done any better. Let's not forget, the latest crash happened on the Republicans' watch.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Plantagenet » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 20:13:16

Number of folks on disability rises to 8,800,000+ for the 19th straight month of increases to the already record high disability claims.

8,800,000 folks now on disability

I wonder how many of the people going on disability actually did it because they couldn't find a job in the WORST RECOVERY EVER

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Numbers on welfare, foodstamps and disability continue to grow in the WORST RECOVERY EVER
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 20:24:38

These are not hard times.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Plantagenet » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 20:43:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', 'T')hese are not hard times.


Of course not. You get on disability and get some food stamps and you're doing pretty good.

Its not too great if you're 22 and just graduated from college with $50,000 in debt and you can't find a job that pays a middle-class wage, but its bearable if you're 55 and just got laid off and you can see retirement is just over the hill anyway. :roll:
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Buddy_J » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 21:09:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Beery1', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', 'W')ell, "going the way of Zimbabwe" ...not quite yet. But the Prez, he sure is tryin' awful hard.


Yeah, like Romney would have done any better. Let's not forget, the latest crash happened on the Republicans' watch.


Sure..and then Obama had 4 years and his own pocket congress to fix it and managed to prove that we would have been better off with George for a 3rd term. But the good news is, the deficit only needed to be a trillion dollars a year to create the worst recovery ever!

Better luck next time maybe?
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Buddy_J » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 21:17:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '
')I wonder how many of the people going on disability actually did it because they couldn't find a job in the WORST RECOVERY EVER


Well, when you are encouraged from the top to do anything other than reorient your skills with their value in the marketplace, of COURSE you do disability, and wait until your unemployment runs out before actually looking for work, and no one should ever ask you to retrain into a job which might pay decent wages because...heckfire...you might need to learn some math or something! Let those oil field jobs go begging because who in the hell wants to move to another state for opportunity, if the government can't drop me a high paying job requiring no skills and not minding an employee who calls in sick half the time because they stub their toe right next to my house because sure I don't want to commute, gasoline is $4/gal, then screw it! Someone help me fill out paperwork to get on the dole! I paid taxes for those 3 months I worked one summer...now I am OWED!! FEED ME! GIVE ME CASH! WHERE ARE MY FOOD STAMPS! I NEED JOB TRAINING BECAUSE EMPLOYERS DON'T LIKE MY GED EVER SINCE THE GOVERNMENT MADE IT EASY ENOUGH THAT A CHIMPANZEE CAN GET ONE! WWWHHHHHHAAAAAAAAAA!!!!

Enough to make working people who have to support all the newly freeloading sick. :twisted:
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby SamInNebraska » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 21:22:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '
')I wonder how many of the people going on disability actually did it because they couldn't find a job in the WORST RECOVERY EVER


Well, when you are encouraged from the top to do anything other than reorient your skills with their value in the marketplace, of COURSE you do disability, and wait until your unemployment runs out before actually looking for work, and no one should ever ask you to retrain into a job which might pay decent wages because...heckfire...you might need to learn some math or something! Let those oil field jobs go begging because who in the hell wants to move to another state for opportunity, if the government can't drop me a high paying job requiring no skills and not minding an employee who calls in sick half the time because they stub their toe right next to my house because sure I don't want to commute, gasoline is $4/gal, then screw it! Someone help me fill out paperwork to get on the dole! I paid taxes for those 3 months I worked one summer...now I am OWED!! FEED ME! GIVE ME CASH! WHERE ARE MY FOOD STAMPS! I NEED JOB TRAINING BECAUSE EMPLOYERS DON'T LIKE MY GED EVER SINCE THE GOVERNMENT MADE IT EASY ENOUGH THAT A CHIMPANZEE CAN GET ONE! WWWHHHHHHAAAAAAAAAA!!!!

Enough to make working people who have to support all the newly freeloading sick. :twisted:


Holy Cow....sounds like you are more than a little...interested....in the current politics of American decline. Or you really don't like those dependent on GovCo for any reason.
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Plantagenet » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 22:31:08

Universities start suing their own former students to make them repay their student loans

Yale and other universities now suing former students to make them repay their student loans

The universities need former students to repay the loan money they got so it can be loaned to new students to keep the seats filled in their classrooms.

The article says one college admin officer says "They can get a job at subway to repay their student loans----whats the problem?"

Exactly right---these aren't hard times---even though this is the WORST RECOVERY EVER there are still jobs at Subway!

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To Do list: 1. graduate from college 2. Get a mininum wage job at Subway 3. start repaying $30,000 in student loans
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Re: This is the WORST RECOVERY EVER

Unread postby Plantagenet » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 18:09:30

The next problem facing the WORST RECOVERY EVER is the sequestration law. This law was part of Obama's great legislative victory over congress at the start of the year when he raised taxes as a temporary fix to get by the fiscal cliff.

Now Obama wants another temporary fix to postpone the temporary fix that the sequestration law was supposed to be when he signed it into law just a month ago.

The economy would do a bit better if the Obama people could actually come up with a long term plan instead of temporary fix after temporary fix, but since Obama just failed to present the next budget to Congress by the legally mandated time again, it appears theres no hope of a budget or plan coming from the White House anytime soon. :roll:
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