Re: is it me or does Rick Santorum......
We're trying to tackle several topics here all at once, but as far as the economy basically it boils down to one side thinking Keynesian economics + government has got us this far so its going to keep working, and the other side thinking that Keynesian economics + government is flawed. Now on to it...
Replace California with the Federal Government in all of those sentences and you've still got the truth. The only reason it seems to look better at the D.C. level is because the feds can print money to buy its own bonds or, as in the case of Quantitative Easing, private mortgage backed securities and/or equities. If California had this ability, they'd just print money to keep interest rates low to "stimulate" growth and keep things looking fine just like the Fed does; and it would work so long as people accepted that California's currency and paper were the best in the world.
Its the same basic shell game as Credit Default Swaps, but as soon as a few people (Governments, Private entities, etc) decide they want their money at the same time it'll all fall apart just like housing did. The only reason this probably won't happen is that we're the largest holder of our own debt, which is basically your right hand owing you're left hand money, but instead of working for it and paying it back it just keeps writing more checks.
The answer really is probably somewhere in the middle of economic thinking (government run vs. free market), but we've moved so far one direction and government is so involved in everything, that IMO, we've got to go back the other way a little bit and actually solve some of these issues instead of having government prop up a failing system.
We're trying to tackle several topics here all at once, but as far as the economy basically it boils down to one side thinking Keynesian economics + government has got us this far so its going to keep working, and the other side thinking that Keynesian economics + government is flawed. Now on to it...
Originally posted by Mogobs30th
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Its the same basic shell game as Credit Default Swaps, but as soon as a few people (Governments, Private entities, etc) decide they want their money at the same time it'll all fall apart just like housing did. The only reason this probably won't happen is that we're the largest holder of our own debt, which is basically your right hand owing you're left hand money, but instead of working for it and paying it back it just keeps writing more checks.
The answer really is probably somewhere in the middle of economic thinking (government run vs. free market), but we've moved so far one direction and government is so involved in everything, that IMO, we've got to go back the other way a little bit and actually solve some of these issues instead of having government prop up a failing system.
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