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Bogtrotter07
Guest
So I want to start this thread with the posts from the Ukraine thread. It seems like no matter where someone wants to champion Reagan economic policies and a conservative agenda.
FULL DISCLOSURE : I don't care what you believe as long as you take responsibility for your own position. If you are going to argue for something, it is warts and all.
Me, I don't think we have had a competent economic policy in this country for a while. We have had a stifling political agenda, which is killing us. Which is why I would love to scalp anyone who wants blanket expansion of entitlement programs without building in cost efficiency and much more responsibility, and people that would argue failed economic policy I don't care if it is Nixon's price freezes to Reagan's trickle down theory. It is all unworkable crap.
I am a possiblist, not a liberal or a conservative. I think zero sum games are a gimmick used by those in power to control whole segments of the populace. In fact, because things never worked they probably shouldn't be tried; because things worked doesn't mean they will still work. Our growth has led to an economy in uncharted territory. To big to fail, etc., cut government spending/smaller government, and all the other clichés go nowhere to solve the problem.
The fact of the matter is, you can talk as sophisticated economic theory you want. Wizard makes the point "Trickle down doesn't work" because the government can spend more in adjusted dollars than it did during World War II and it doesn't work. Both the Reagan/Bush and the Bush II spent more money that FDR did fighting the Axis, and their administrations showed less job growth that the Clinton Administration did. I don't have the numbers at hand but I think the Carter administration may have outpaced them, too!
So the basic ethical, moral, and scientific question is : "Is putting more earned wealth into the hands of more people the solution to the economic problems faced by America today?" If not, what is?
And if an agenda from the past worked, and it still would, why didn't we stick with it?
FULL DISCLOSURE : I don't care what you believe as long as you take responsibility for your own position. If you are going to argue for something, it is warts and all.
Me, I don't think we have had a competent economic policy in this country for a while. We have had a stifling political agenda, which is killing us. Which is why I would love to scalp anyone who wants blanket expansion of entitlement programs without building in cost efficiency and much more responsibility, and people that would argue failed economic policy I don't care if it is Nixon's price freezes to Reagan's trickle down theory. It is all unworkable crap.
I am a possiblist, not a liberal or a conservative. I think zero sum games are a gimmick used by those in power to control whole segments of the populace. In fact, because things never worked they probably shouldn't be tried; because things worked doesn't mean they will still work. Our growth has led to an economy in uncharted territory. To big to fail, etc., cut government spending/smaller government, and all the other clichés go nowhere to solve the problem.
Yes, government money. The problem with the New Deal was that it wasn't ambitious enough. WW2 just so happened to be the greatest public works project in history. A Keynesian dream.
Even with the Regan military buildup, military spending as a percentage of GDP was much lower than WW2 levels.
I bring this up because I hear so many people who are against government spending during recessions, yet think WW2 got us out of the depression. They're the same thing.
WW2 didn't end the depression because of stimulus or government spending. It ended the depression because we were building bombs. Those were the proverbial "shovel ready jobs" that were completely absent from the Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Full employment is also pretty easy WHEN THERE'S A DRAFT.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GTQnarzmTOc
The great irony is that the big-government types criticize Reaganomics as "trickle down," when the real "top down" approach comes from the GOVERNMENT, not business.
Thank you for proving my point. Wizard pointed out a great difference. Government has become so massive (a country of over 300 M people versus a country of 100 M people just making the conversion from agrarian and industrial to post industrial economy) that small stimuluses' aimed at the rich do nothing but make the rich richer. They don't effect the whole economy in the positive manner needed to improve the economy. We are in fact past the point of being able to stimulate our way out of recession caused by stupidity and greed.
But I don't want to take up this thread on that subject. I will start a new thread with this post and link back for anyone that would care to comment.
The fact of the matter is, you can talk as sophisticated economic theory you want. Wizard makes the point "Trickle down doesn't work" because the government can spend more in adjusted dollars than it did during World War II and it doesn't work. Both the Reagan/Bush and the Bush II spent more money that FDR did fighting the Axis, and their administrations showed less job growth that the Clinton Administration did. I don't have the numbers at hand but I think the Carter administration may have outpaced them, too!
So the basic ethical, moral, and scientific question is : "Is putting more earned wealth into the hands of more people the solution to the economic problems faced by America today?" If not, what is?
And if an agenda from the past worked, and it still would, why didn't we stick with it?
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