Schneibster wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Schneibster wrote:If anybody wants to read some actual economics by an actual professor of economics at Berkeley, try
Brad DeLong's blog. The chart in the upper right hand corner is enough to show Coitus here hasn't got a fucking clue, either about what's wrong, or about what to do about it. Unfortunately, neither, to all appearances, does Obama, but he at least appears at long last to be getting one. I suspect ol' Coitus there never will, but I've been wrong before and I'll be wrong again.
I would absolutely love to read your explanation of the civilian employment-population ratio chart, and how, exactly, that shows I don't have a clue. Feel free. I bet you won't, though.
Let me explain it to you though, and see if you can get why it doesn't support anything you've been saying. The chart shows the ratio of employed civilians to the total population. Right now, it's about 58% which is the lowest its been in about 31 years. So, if you'd like to explain how this chart dropping from about 63% in 2008 to 58% now, and still on a downward trend, shows I don't have clue, or that you have one, I'd be quit interested...

OK. You managed not to lie in this one (we'll overlook the rhetorical lie that you would absolutely love to read the explanation).
I haven't lied at all, and your constant unsubstantiated allegations in that regard constitute personal attacks. I'm sick and tired of your nonsense. If you care to discuss matters in a civil manner, I will. But, your puerile, fatuous casuistry and your
ad hominem attacks have worn their welcome.
Schneibster wrote:
When things were OK, then they're fucked up, and you find that an important indicator of goodness like the percentage of people employed has dropped like that, it's a pretty strong indication of where the problem is coming from.
You'll have to write in some semblance of a grammatically correct fashion. Perfection is not required, but for crying out loud, "When things were OK, then they're fucked up, and you find that an important indicator of goodness like the percentage of people employed has dropped like that, it's a pretty strong indication of where the problem is coming from?" Really? You typed that and thought it made some sense?
Schneibster wrote:
In this case the problem is demand.
If the government doesn't spend money when there's a demand problem, the demand problem won't go away.
Your belief is that demand is only created by the government spending money? The problem won't go away otherwise?
Schneibster wrote:
You're whining about running up the debt.
I haven't whined about it. Excessive debt is not a good thing.
Schneibster wrote:
It doesn't matter right now if we run up the debt, because if we don't, we'll never get out of this, and the debt will keep going up no matter what we do.
We most certainly can get out of this without running up the debt.
Moreover, the more debt a country holds, the less money it's able to put away in savings and reinvest in the nation's economy.This is especially a problem since the Baby Boomers are starting to retire in larger and larger numbers, and the Medicare/Social Security accounts will no longer be available as a source to pay for other things. Federal borrowing to pay off the deficit will inevitably lead to higher interest rates, affecting the ability of citizens to buy homes and take out loans, and of course limiting the ability of businesses and industry to access capital as well.
Schneibster wrote:
Which is why I said you don't have a clue.
You used that nonsense language to attack me personally, because you really have no knowledge of what you're talking about beyond the talking point. Now you're supposed to say "debt doesn't matter" because your political team thinks we need to spend, spend, spend, spend. You've not in the least demonstrated your position - you've just stated it - declared it to be true by fiat, and then claimed that if I don't agree, I'm "clueless," and I don't know anything about real economics. Well, your last couple of posts have demonstrated that while you pretend to some sort of expertise, you can barely type a coherent sentence and you resort to namecalling and various other tactics to belittle others instead of addressing the topic at hand.
Schneibster wrote:
Which that graph shows.
The graph shows nothing of the kind. It shows the ratio of the employed population to the population at large, and it shows very clearly that the large drop occurred in 2009, 10 and is continuing in 2011. The timing of the Stimulus plan in 2009 shows that $800 billion of Stimulus did nothing, or nothing much, to stimulate job growth. The lesson really is that flushing money down the toilet or merely injecting money anywhere into the economy doesn't ultimately help.
Real help would come from encouraging or helping to create a needed industry that produces something. That would create the needed demand. For example, if instead of placing yokes around the neck of the coal industry, if we encouraged that industry, we could take advantage of demand on the global level, and that industry would grow. Growth in that industry would translate into jobs in that industry.
Similarly, we could expand the nuclear industry, and build a few dozen power plants -- there is huge demand for energy, so that business would take off and jobs would follow as the industry grows.
Those are two examples, and there are many others.
Throwing money at some temporary project doesn't ultimately work. It didn't work in the Great Depression, where the unemployment level in 1939 was not much less than in 1930. In 1930, unemployment went from 3.2 to 8.7 percent, and in 1931 it rose to 15.9 percent. In 1932, it was 23%. With all the efforts for years and years to do exactly what you're doing - unemployment was 19% in 1938.
Schneibster wrote:
And that's also why it's in the upper right hand corner of the economics professor's blog. In case you hadn't noticed.
You're a bright one, aren't you?
Next?
You honestly think you've shown something? Look, genius, just repeating the same declaration over and over again won't make it any more persuasive. Your entire argument is: We need to spend trillions of borrowed government money - doesn't matter where or how - just throw it bags out to all comers - and that'll fix the economy. And, you think that having a public debt equal to the entire GDP of a country has no effect on the economy and is no big deal -not only that - you want to increase it to well over 100% of GDP.
I'll tell you, though, I really have responded too much to you. I am telling you now - stop it with the personal insults and the attacks. If you care to discuss these economic issues in a civil manner, then I will be glad to do so, but I'm certainly not going to listen to a childish capon clucking on with false accusations of lies and constant insults.