![]() |
David Stockman, Reagan economist, on debt spree
I found this interesting....
Quote:
|
Uh, Huh. That's right.
Dave |
It seems that the only Republicans who make any sense WRT to the economy are out of government.
|
"Q: What about Obama?
A: He's got to stop talking about taxing only the top 2 percent. Tax increases are going to have to include the middle class. On this path we're heading toward class warfare." My only real caveat to this entire article. I believe we have BEEN engaged in class warfare for a very long time. And since about, oh, I'm guessing, the 1980s or so the middle class has been losing. Dave |
Agreed on the Q/A and he would have been part of the original Reaganomics fail as well. I find it so strange seeing good examples of how far right the GOP has gone. Almost as surprising GOPpers haven't taken their party back.
The gun article showing that Berkeley of all places had a multi term Republican state assemblyman back in the late 60's was a shocker too. :eek: Carl |
While it has that objectiveness that comes from the outside man is refreshingly real, I find it strange that Stockman hits on Wall Street twice..
Quote:
And -- this is ill-considered.. Quote:
"Churning" in the market is NOT non-productive. Although there's a casino aspect to how the market behaves, the volume of trades aids in defining the correct price for every asset. A market that doesn't churn, isn't as predictive. It's in the process of over or under estimating the assets.. Other than that, when you look at the balance between outlays and revenues, there is a natural balance rate of about 18% of GDP all the way from the 50s thru the 90s. http://nationalpriorities.org/resour...2015-perc-gdp/ That last bit of the graph shows the unmitigated irresponsibility that lost the Dems the House and created the Tea Party. I've kinda decided that I would actually support tax increases if they were done across the board. I do that KNOWING it's gonna kick the shit out of this drifting economy. Kinda like chemotherapy.. You poison the whole system to TRY and defeat the cancer. It will also leave the Dems and MSNBC with virtually NOTHING to offer -- so the whining will stop.. But I'm not ready for that sacrifice if the critters in Congress won't return the remaining stimulus to the Treasury, end our wars abroad, and sell off their "investments" that were made in cars, banks and insurance companies. |
Flacaltenn, do you realize how much money is made on Wall Street simply through computer algorithms that can see trades coming down the tape and buy and sell in microseconds to take advantage of the spread? This is nothing more than a leech on top of what is mostly speculative gambling anyway. Taxing this would be a good thing if it increased revenue AND discouraged this parasitic drag on the market.
I'm amazed that Stockman, who I reviled in the Reagan years, is actually making some sense now. I'm also amazed at the knee-jerk "NO" response that Flacaltenn gives to absolutely every thoughtful proposal that doesn't basically dismantle the government. I agree that government is broken. We need to fix it, not abandon it. |
Quote:
"I don't want a government that doesn't regulate. I want a government that regulates responsibly." I believe that until BOTH parties* get that message, this country will go nowhere. Dave (*And the Tea Party) |
JonL:
Quote:
As for your tech adversions -- it was MUCH better when the appointed gate keepers could SIT on your market order and skim off on latent trades. Their floor yeller got trampled in the stampede and your order got lost. Today, companies get SUED for falling behind in orders by even a couple hours. I always say -- "just give me my Rolodex and file cabinets back and I'll compete with those computer nerds".. Like I said before, churning is a good thing. If you impose a tax to lower the volume of the market trades, it's like trying to make polling more accurate by lowering your sample size. Try ANOTHER excuse to tax market trades. Maybe that one will stick.. And JonL: Before you try to label me as a NO man.. Did you miss the part where I was considering tax INCREASES? |
There you go again, Flacaltenn... Sure, there were problems in the past with the way trades were executed. What does that have to do with identifying and fixing problems that exist today? Today there are algorithms that just sit there and skim profits off of everyone elses trades. They add nothing to pricing stability, production, or anything else of value. I have a close friend who's a NYSE trader. He explained it to me. He's against it BTW. I'll get more info.
Oh, also nice to extrapolate from my statements that I want gov't to ban anything with risk. WTF??? How do you make this crap up? You should really try to channel that creativity in a positive direction. |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:55 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.