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Adil R

Obama Needs to Learn "Opportunity Cost" - 1 views

    • Adil R
       
      This article asses Obama's stimulus plan. It talks off how congress passed the ARRA stimulus package which injected $787billion into the government sector. Obama stated that this package wouldnt allow the unemployment rate to pass 8% however it reached 10%. Obama said that the depth of the recession couldnt be foreseen however there were many people who predicted it.
  • that unemployment with his bailout would likely reach 10 percent.
  • he also doesn’t understand basic economic concepts such as “opportunity cost.
  • ...38 more annotations...
  • experts promised that unemployment rates wouldn’t pass eight percent
  • creates money out of thin air via the Federal Reserve
  • as the cost paid when something is given up to get something else.
  • The federal government can’t spend money on “stimulus” projects without siphoning the money out of the economy as a whole
  • resulting inflation of the money supply dimishes the purchasing power
    • Adil R
       
      The article then goes on by stating Obama does not know the concept of opportunity cost. $787billion was taken out of the federal reserve to pay for federal programs resulting into the weakening of the current dollar value and inflation. This had an impact on everyone, nearly $7000 per household. Government jobs do not make a salary and therefore do not stimulate the economy. This can also lead to an increase in taxes whilst still barely benefiting the community. Opportunity cost kicks in here as the obama administration thought that this was the next big thing as apposed to injecting it to private sector. The article too talks about how private businesses contribute to the economy even if the company is failing as it still receives services and eventually the more efficient company will take over. Moreover they can make profits and they can better the economy by hiring or purchasing consumer goods.
  • taxpayers would likely spend or invest nearly all of that money taken from them
  • dollars with more valu
  • nvest more in their company, or pay higher dividends to investors
  • save the money and invest it in business growth
  • more consumer goods
  • $7,000 per household
  • defined
  • teachers, police officers,
  • irefighters on state
  • payrolls doesn’t stimulate the national economy
  • hurts
  • Government jobs
  • do not make a profit
  • Governments
  • hire employees and build overpriced buildings and roads
  • money is gone.
  • putting more funds into the hands of government is not efficient
  • reinvest those profits in the manufacture of new goods, jobs, and more efficient factories.
  • businesses employ people for a profit
  • replaced with more efficient businesses
  • allowed
  • to fail
  • government entities subsidize inefficient private corporations
  • allowed to fail
  • hey should
  • free market inefficient businesses
  • inefficient governments
  • never happens
  • government jobs require constant transfusions of taxes
  • static number of people employed
  • private sector is the only area of the economy that can lead to self-sustaining job growth and economic recovery
  • He should know that opportunity costs under ARRA demonstrate that the “stimulus” bill tipped the unemployment figures higher and worsened the economic recession.
Christopher P

Fed's Rosengren: Government Fiscal Policy Big Drag on Economy - 0 views

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    This article discusses the delicate balance between fiscal and monetary policy. The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Eric Rosengren, blames inefficient fiscal policy on the little-effect monetary policy is having on the economy. He argues that tight fiscal policy, or contractionary strategies, are making it more difficult for the Federal Reserve to lower the unemployment rate. However, it is important to understand that monetary or fiscal policy is not better than the other. Instead, it is likely to take a combination of strategies to combat problems in the economy.
Christopher P

The Fed's Bullard thinks inflation is dangerously low - 0 views

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    This article deals with the delicate balance between inflation that is too high or too low. The president of the Federal Reserve Bank in St. Louis, James Bullard, argues that the current inflation rate (1.3%) may be getting dangerously close to reaching deflation. Although the unemployment rate has remained higher than 7%, the inflation rate is well below the comfortable 2% goal kept by the Federal Reserve. If the issue becomes preventing deflation, the "Fed" should instead use policies to increase the money supply rather than adopt "tight" money supplies that slow inflation and economic growth.
anonymous

Federal sequestration cutbacks to lower unemployment benefits for 45,000 in Massachusetts - 0 views

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    Unemployment benefits will fall by 13% for those "who have been unemployed for at least six months." This cut on unemployment benefits will affect 45,000 Massachusetts residents and 2 million people nationwide.
Christopher P

S&P Sued by U.S. for &5 Billion For Role in Crisis - 0 views

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    The justice department of the Untied States has filed charges against Standard & Poor's, the largest credit ranking agency, for its involvement in the 2008 financial crisis. The article mentions how our current market, where three large credit agencies have had a sort of monopoly over the market, contrasts with the ideal form of perfect competition (where firms move freely but within certain rules). The author suggests however that the Federal Reserve may have had an equally significant role in the economic collapse, and by not acknowledging its own faults may give off a very poor image to the public.
anonymous

banks becoming oligopolies? - 1 views

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    As banks are starting to snatch up smaller banks and are headed toward a oligopoly, the U.S. federal reserve has started to try and take action. With just two banks leading the forefront (Wells Fargo and Chase), other banks have started to pull out, stating that their competitors have become too powerful.
Deepak B

The Economy and Fed Policy: Follow the Demand - 0 views

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    The primary reason unemployment remains high is a lack of demand. An aggregate demand shortfall is exactly the kind of problem monetary policy can address. Thus, we need powerful and continuing monetary stimulus to move toward maximum employment and price stability. The following is adapted from a presentation by the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco to The Forecasters Club in New York, New York, on February 21, 2013.
Nehir D

Strong Housing and Auto Sales Boost U.S. Economy - 0 views

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    The article is talking about the strengthening housing recovery and robust auto sales contributed to moderate growth across the United States.Employers added only 88,000 jobs in March, a sharp slowdown from average gains of 220,000 in November through February. And consumers cut back on their spending at retail stores and restaurants last month, a sign that higher Social Security taxes have made more Americans cautious about spending.Debate was about Fed policymakers about when to rein in the bond-buying program, which began last fall.The Fed is expected to stick with plans to keep short-term interest rates at record lows at least until unemployment falls to 6.5 percent. And it will likely continue purchasing $85 billion a month in Treasury and mortgage bonds to lower long-term rates and encouraging more borrowing.
anonymous

jobs over inflation - 0 views

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    The federal reserve decided to choose to save jobs instead of fight inflation. They realized that they have to fight unemployment.
Christopher P

Mica to introduce legislation to end Amtrak 'monopoly' - 0 views

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    House Representative John Mica of Florida, my home state, is planning to introduce legislation to Congress to address what he considers to be Amtrak's monopoly over passenger-rail service. The legislation would aim to increase competition in this industry, not end Amtrak itself. Mica is a member of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and hopes that Congress will consider federal rail policies later this year.
anonymous

Reign in Multinational companies - 0 views

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    Oxfam wants countries to use the G20 summit meeting to reign in multinational companies who are avoiding taxes because of their large geographic location.
anonymous

The false belief that income inequality can't be fixed - 0 views

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    This article states that "the federal government [of the United States] redistributes less income than it used to." It also states that there are "a variety of indirect ways" to redistribute income, an example of which is minimum wage.
Nehir D

The Rut We Can't Get Out Of - 0 views

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    The article is talking about the federal government which has shut down today because of an impasse over the budge and in two weeks, the nation is set to hit its borrowing limit.The major problem in the articles is that there is an oversupply of global labor, an oversupply of global productive capacity and an oversupply of global capital. The jobs created low wages and part time. Growth in domestic manufacturing is still slow which will prevent the development of a country in their own production and prevent the large amount of profit they will get as a result of the domestic production.Business spending has fallen, rents of the houses falling where home prices have increased. The reason why its hard to get out from the rut is because they are no longer faced with a world in which supply-side economic remedies, easy money, reduced taxation, fiscal belt-tightening and deregulation can spur new capacity and the creation of well-paying private sector jobs.Countries that were recently poor find themselves with huge surpluses and sovereign wealth funds. The rich countries of the world, while still rich, struggle with monumental levels of debt, both private and public, and unsettling questions about whether they can compete globally.Also to clear this mess,developed nations need to put the huge surplus of underemployed workers back to work by any means, including big public sector investments to improve infrastructure and competitiveness.Moreover, a new economic multilateral ism with the developing world, to encourage them to re balance their economics away from savings and toward consumption, while we in the West must curb our addiction to credit and consumption is necessary.
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