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Delay = RINO
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Delay = RINO
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The key to communication is how the message is received and understood by by your audience. If you think you say X and everyone else heard something else, you did not say X. The problem may lie with the speaker and not the audience. S_A_M |
Delay = RINO
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Your hypothesis was the deficit would have been eliminated without the 1993 Tax Act. That is a fine hypothesis, and I would have been happy to see it borne out. If it were borne out, I could pay less in taxes without worrying about it coming back to haunt us later on. To test the hypothesis, I looked at some very raw, general numbers and saw that in the 1990s, there was a very significant growth in tax receipts, much more significant that the growth in the economy. If you can find an explanation, and I buy bracket creep as a partial but by no mean full explanation, for the full variation, that's great. If the differential in the big numbers was 10% or even 20%, I would have said items like bracket creap may well explain it. Does anyone know if there is data somewhere scoring how much money was raised by the 1993 Act itself? While I know the Republicans claimed it was the largest tax increase in History, I do not have any data for how much money it raised. We also saw a growth in governmental expenditures that was slower than the growth in the economy. That supports your hypothesis somewhat, and likely comes in part from the "peace dividend". See - I've been doing some of your work. But, that reduction was not enough to have eliminated the deficit on its own. I will offer a contrary hypothesis, which is that a systematic government policy of deficit reduction was maintained in the 1990s that through a unique set of developments that resulted in both the Democrats and the Republicans backing it. Without Clinton and the Democrats, the tax increase component of deficit reduction likely would have been abandoned. Without the Republicans, the reduction of government expenditures may well have been substantially less (though, note, Republicans have been good at defending military expenditures, particularly during the Bush administration but rapidly increasing military expenditures were also a hallmark of the Reagan years, so it may just be that government expenditures would have been different and that Democrats also need some credit on holding down expenditures). I will also posit a separate hypothesis, which is that deficit reduction and a balanced budget can only be accomplished by general consensus, because of the tragedy of the commons theory. That means that a high level of partisanship in government, as we have now, is a very bad indicator for deficits. As long as there are heavily fought partisan battles, whoever has the balance of power, the Republicans in this case, are going to try to spend their way to political victory. Whether you think that is a good thing or not, of course, will depend on how partisan you are. |
Delay = RINO
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While I really do not believe bond markets are the end-all and be-all of economic health, and have no opinion as to whether bond traders are particularly intelligent or insightful in general (don't they mostly yell loudly in a pit for a living?), at this point I have the sense that everyone's position on what happened is based more on oversimplified partisan rhetoric than on anything that may have happened in the bond market in the 1990s. Will someone please prove me wrong? |
Just compensation
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It strikes me that a rational real estate developer has a better chance of assembling a useful larger parcel for development in the affected area than they had before Katrina, regardless of anything the government does. |
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(Except in 1994, when the bond market took a bath. Uh, Piper Jaffray, anyone?) |
Delay = RINO
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Delay = RINO
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Someone needs to ask Thottam to come here, or maybe Plated, someone controversial. |
Delay = RINO
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By the way, what is a RINO? |
Thoughts?
I've been seeing articles on the impending retirements of boomers, and the possible effect of these retirements. It's going to start having an effect on me quite soon (about 4 people I work with fairly closely will be eligible for early retirement (we have a DB plan) in the next few years). There was an article in the WSJ a week or two ago, too.
http://www.benefitnews.com/finance/detail.cfm?id=8081 |
Delay = RINO
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Thoughts?
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I think we sould be loosening immigration restrictions now in prepartion. Perhaps establishing 10 or 20 year brain drain visas. And thank you for the RINO response. |
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Delay = RINO
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"I am happy to admit that budget numbers have some level of dynamism and don't respond in a straight line. As you note, there are many factors. These factors, of course, will go both ways. But given the extraordinary differential (50% growth in GDP, 100% growth in receipts), I am not going to be convinced until you show some evidence that the dynamic factors have that big an impact. Bracket creep, for example, can increase the rate by a percentage on income over a given level, but that is not a 50% increase in tax revenue." |
Delay = RINO
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I am not saying that Bond Markets are that connected to economic health. What I am saying is that they are connected to the federal deficit. Bond traders want to make them low to be competitive, however, if they make them too low and the Federal budget deficit gets out of hand they will end up losing money. These guys have more of a vested interest in predicting the future deficit than anyone else. In addition, what they set the long term rates at can have a significant effect on the economy. That is why Clinton found them so important. If he could convince the bond market that there would be fiscal discipline then the long term rates would go down and the economy would boom. With Rubin as the Treasury Secretary (a former bond trader) and Clinton being the head of the party, the bond market thought that he might be able to reign in Congress. When it was clear that he could not ("the 93 deficit pact") then the bond traders increased the rates because they thought deficits were going to explode. Once the Republican came in the bond markets thought there would be fiscal dicsipline so they lowered their rates. These contributed to the economic boom that lead to the balanced budget. |
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