by MrBill » Wed 20 Dec 2006, 09:26:47
Euric wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he rest of the world isn't willing to go on like this. If you take a hint from the article, Germany is booming and confidence is increasing because Germany has learned to find other buyers for their products and not rely on the US. Thus when the US does fall they will take no one with them.
I guess you're wrong then. China's exports to the EU have been growing faster than their exports to the USA in 2006. Meanwhile, the US' exports have been growing in 2006 due to a weaker dollar.
I look at it like this.
Sorry, I have to distill my ideas down to bite sized pieces or I cannot understand them myself.
If a town councellor argues that lengthening store opening hours will stimulate the economy, and add
X to the GDP, I have to think about it as the consumer has
Y to spend. Whether they spend
Y in 8-hours 6-days a week or 12-hours 7-days a week they are limited by how much money is left at the end of the month,
Y , not by how long the stores are open. Okay, you can throw in some part-time work for teenagers and the under employed, but without primary and secondary industry to support consumer spending, longer store hours are not likely to result in more money being spent by consumers, but it will increase their convenience factor.
Although Germany runs a healthy $195 billion 12-mos. trade surplus with Europe and the rest of the world, the EU actually has a $24 billion deficit in tradables. Oops.
Also, if America's trade deficit soars to a record, by default it would indicate to me that someone else's trade surplus also reached records? Or is America trading with extraterrestrials?
Your hatred for everything American seems to blind you to the detriment of your overall posts that contain many valid points. Something you may want to work on in 2007 as your New Year's resolution?
I think your metric argument is a good one. But it is not the whole story - by a mile! ; - )
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.