If so, why would you now have us rule out any further helping out of fellow Americans with respect to their household debt, even if via politically timed and executed stimulus?
Agree on both counts. Lowered taxes certainly can provide long term benefits to people, but it just doesn't make for an effective short term stimulus solution IMO.
If so, why would you now have us rule out any further helping out of fellow Americans with respect to their household debt, even if via politically timed and executed stimulus?
God I hope you're right about that. The bad economic news ain't even arrived yet.
The short term benefit is minimal to non-existant and the long term benefit still comes at a price. Tax breaks can help out households individual financial situation in the long run, but the tradeoff is that it only makes an already huge gap in en lement programs even bigger. There's already a $534,000 per capita gap between promised benefits and estimated revenues that needs to be reconciled through some combination of benefit cuts & tax increases. Cutting taxes only makes that number bigger and brings us closer to the day where we'll no longer be able to put off making a decision.
A lot of somebodies want to make that trade. Larry Summers made a big noise about it today.
Then there's everyone else who stands to get 50 gold pieces from Caesar.
No need to feather it out in a depression?
Can't the rough stuff be put off a year or two while everyone muddles through and pretends to be whole? When's the drop dead date?
Here in lies the biggest problem with stimulus. Not in stimulus itself, but how/when it is used and the timing of people pointing to it as a problem.
I would spend it then, but the inflation that would result from a 5 trillion dollar stimulus would probably be counterproductive.
There's a reason why unemployment benefits are some of the best ways to spend stimulus. That being said, I don't want to see 300 dollars for 24 months going to everyone in this country. That will simply be government subsidized consumerism which has far greater ramifications on the levels of consumption our country has which are flat out unsustainable.
I don't think that necessarily means they're not spending the money. Its more symptomatic of how big the problems we are facing are and how unsustainable the level of consumption we need for growth is.
Unemployment benefits yes. Money to folks who already have jobs, no:
A very dumb idea.
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