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Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Printable Version +- Generational Theory Forum: The Fourth Turning Forum: A message board discussing generations and the Strauss Howe generational theory (http://generational-theory.com/forum) +-- Forum: Fourth Turning Forums (http://generational-theory.com/forum/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Current Events (http://generational-theory.com/forum/forum-34.html) +---- Forum: General Political Discussion (http://generational-theory.com/forum/forum-15.html) +---- Thread: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. (/thread-555.html) |
RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Bob Butler 54 - 12-05-2016 (12-05-2016, 11:29 AM)Warren Dew Wrote: Ah, Bob, back to ignoring the information you yourself provided that challenges your previous world view, I see. Good job on denying reality. I'm not one to play the blame game at the level you are going after. I'd need to delve quite a bit more into economic history and academic theory. I'm vaguely hoping Mikebert and others with a greater interest in economics will step back in to cover that. I am more interested in the values and political aspect. When the Republicans have the White House, regardless of the academic merits of what the Republicans may or may not be trying to do, political realities trump the academic theories. We get disasters. When the Democrats have the White House, the Republicans can't mess them up as badly, not that they don't try. We get anemic inadequate recoveries. The academic theories on what might be done in a non-partisan environment seem pretty irrelevant. The question is what policies can survive in the real world. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - playwrite - 12-05-2016 (12-04-2016, 11:30 AM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote:(12-04-2016, 10:27 AM)Mikebert Wrote: Warren, I do not understand why you seem to want a much bigger federal debt/GDP ratio. It appears you think if top tax rates are cut there will be an investment boom and strong economic growth--what I call the "Field of Dreams" school of economics (if you build it (invest) they (jobs) will come). Why do you think cutting taxes will incent people to put their cash at risk. Do you think I am sitting in cash because I don't want to have to pay taxes on the potential profits I could reap if this finally comes true? Or is it because of the scary high market, with a much greater probability of much lower prices before Dow 36,000 becomes reality? From my viewpoint, you have everything right except for the current need for demand. There's plenty of U6 "not seeking" and more improtantly wage growth is nowhere near being of inflationary concern. There's still plenty of underemployment. The real measure for suffienct/insufficent spending (private and public) is inflation/deflation. Right now, inflation is no where near an issue and with energy trying to just stay afloat, increasing automation, and likely trickle down Trump idioacy sending more money into T-bills, it isn't going to be likely of real concern in our liftetimes. Let's let technocrats at the FED hammer out inflation status and projections rather than let sheeple at truck stops weigh-in with usual horseshit memes fed to them by their elite masters. In the interim of any harmful inflation becoming even a twinkle in the FED chair's eye, we can repair a lot of bridges before they fall down, do something about our 3rd world airports, get the lead of kids' drinking water, maybe catch up with the rest of the world with high speed trains that would actually make the midWest economically relevant in the future. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - playwrite - 12-05-2016 (12-04-2016, 03:25 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:(12-03-2016, 11:57 PM)playwrite Wrote:(12-02-2016, 02:05 AM)Warren Dew Wrote:(12-01-2016, 08:30 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: Lowering taxes does not work; printing more money or government spending are better (especially the latter). That would mean interest on the debt would also rise, so in that case high debt would come back to bite us. Mulipliers - I think you're the one that is being blinded by ideology. That's the only way to explain your fetish with the spending mulitpliers and your embracing deficit spending - that's cognitive dissonance. Give it some more thought. Spending and improving lives - Try not having income and see how that improves your life. Everyone's income is based on someone else's spending. From an economic standpoint, the ones getting the income don't give a shXt who is spending it - money doesn't come with a memory; that's one of money's most important characteristics. FBI agents paying hookers in Las Vegas with federal dolllars are going to add income to the local economy. Those hookers are going to buy food, get their nails done, and lots of medical services. That spending provides income to grocery stores, nail salons, and medical offices and the people that work there - that income does improve those people lives - if you doubt it, again, see how long you can go without some income and how much your life improves once you get the income back. On the other hand, corporate giveaways such as repratations returning overseas cash to corporations already swiming in corporate cash is just going to result in stock buybacks or dividend increases - the vast majority of stockholders are just going to "reinvest" that money into the secondary equity markets which is not real investment, it's just savings - all resulting in either just more "parking" it in nonproductive T-bills at best and financial asset inflation at worse. That may improve wealth on paper for some but it doesn't do anything for the general economy and most people. Moreover, that paper wealth will be fleeting if the economic growth doesn't eventually back it up. If you're truly concerned about improving lives, you get money into the hands of people that will spend it. Oversupply and prices - have you've been in a coma for the past 8 years? That would explain alot. Prices did fall, and haven't much gone anywhere outside of some asset inflation. Life, let alone the economy, doesn't work like a light switch - lots of ups and downs. We're muddling along after a big hit, and much of that muddling along is due to earlier government stimulus spending Monetary policy has been of some help, but its pretty clear that even at historic ZIRP its been pretty much useless. We could easily get tipped into another economic contraction; if you don't believe that, I'll be happy to take your lunch money in the markets when the time comes. Supplyand plumbers - You have the same problem that Austrians do - if the terms and data don't support your viewpoint, you change basic definitions until they do - unfortunately, just changing definitions does not change reality. Cutting payroll or income taxes on a laborer, like a plumber, is NOT supply economics - it's initial action is to put more money in the hands of the plumber who will then spend it - that increases aggregate demand. If a plumber uses his tax cut to lowers his price, and nothing has increased demand for plumbing, all he does is gain market share from another plumber, and eventually depresses plumbing prices so that plumbers' contribution to demand decreases. This is what is trickiing with payroll tax cuts - they're great initially in putting money into labor's pocket to spend and increase overall demand, but if it goes on too long, businesses adjust the pay to labor and we get a return back to their lower spending and demand. More energy supply - so people are going to leave the lights on all night instead of turning them off at night? Are people going to make three trips to grandmas house on Thanksgiving? Sure, people might take extra trips or not wig out on the kids leaving the lights on when energy is cheaper, but how much cheaper does it have to get to overwhelm all other considerations? There are limits no? And while people are deciding to do something with cheaper energy, South Dakota and parts of Texas plumment into economic contraction and substantial job losses. Have you seen CapEx spending in the energy field, it is putting a major drag on the economy right now. There's a bubble bursting and no supply tax cuts are going to change that, unless someone gives us all private jets and maybe a couple of Hummers in the driveway. Not going to happen. Monetary policy - you don't have to parrot things back to me about the use of monetary policy in both inflationary and deflationary environments. The issue is the usefulness of monetary policy in a deflationary environment where you are already at or near ZIRP. It's only utility in an ongoing deflationary environment is to stay at ZIRP. Once spending, demand, economy, and inflation pick up to health levels, then you can raise rates in hopes of monetary policy offering something useful again. This is not rocket science. Monetarizing the debt - all that actually means is your moving people's savings from interest-bearing T-bills to non- interest bearing cash that people will just park somewhere else. Medical offices as big corperations. And here I thought we were having a serious discussion. You sure you're not a former Austrian now some born-again deficits-don't-matter Trump Chump trying to rationalize tax cuts for the rich? Changing defintions to fit your rationale is a sure giveway. Too funny. Tump/Obama Infrastructure Spending - If you think these are the same two things, then you have a reading comprehension problem. Tax cuts for demand - I didn't say all tax cuts are supply side, but that doesn't mean some tax cuts are nothing but supply side, and in a demand-limited economy, supply side tax cuts only put non-productive wealth in T-bill and secondary markets savings for the rich. Yes, tax cuts, including rate cuts, across the board will have a mix of supply side and demand side elements, but not only do the supply side have no benefit to our current economic situation, they cause a political reaction that results in reduced federal spending to placate the deficit hawks - this can negate any benefit from the tax cuts. Overall, you got some basic things correct, like federal deficit spending is a good thing, but your ideological blinders have got you a tad confused -- all twisted up to the point of even changing basic economic definitions. Not good. I suggest you do a little research on Modern Monetary Theory or better, Modern Monetary Reality. A whole new world can open up for you - it's called reality. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - playwrite - 12-05-2016 (12-04-2016, 07:39 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote:(12-04-2016, 05:15 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: You're confused about what supply side economics is. See my to playwrite for an explanation. It's not about investment at all. Look at Warren's example to me of cutting payroll/income taxes of a plumber. He sees this as "supply side" because the plumber will reduce his price and a lot of people will hire more plumbers at that reduced price. I guess there is currently a lot of clogged toilets that are going to stay that way until Trump gets in and cuts those taxes. Let's hope it's early spring, can you imagine the smell??? It's not just fuzzy defintions, its fuzzy thinking and that's a tad hard to get along with. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Warren Dew - 12-05-2016 People do remodel bathrooms based on whether they can afford it, you know. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Bob Butler 54 - 12-05-2016 (12-05-2016, 04:50 PM)playwrite Wrote: Look at Warren's example to me of cutting payroll/income taxes of a plumber. He sees this as "supply side" because the plumber will reduce his price and a lot of people will hire more plumbers at that reduced price. I guess there is currently a lot of clogged toilets that are going to stay that way until Trump gets in and cuts those taxes. Let's hope it's early spring, can you imagine the smell??? How come, when we were debating the gun policy problem, movie star's bodyguards didn't come up? RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Mikebert - 12-05-2016 (12-04-2016, 05:15 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:(12-04-2016, 10:27 AM)Mikebert Wrote: Warren, I do not understand why you seem to want a much bigger federal debt/GDP ratio. Here’s the problem with your analysis: "However, economic output is limited by the falling proportion of the population still working, so the average living standard the economy can sustain for the population as a whole cannot keep up." This is nonsense. GDP per worker has been rising for 200 years in America and for more than a century in Japan. It’s called the industrial revolution. If there were a retiree population that was receiving a fixed output with a shrinking working population then this would constitute rising economic demand per worker, which translates to rising GDP per worker. GDP is simply another term for the net sales of the collective firms in the economy. This is why they call GDP construction “national accounting”. You are a frickin’ engineer, do the mass balance! Didn’t they teach you in school to first write down the mass and energy balances, then solve the problem? RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Warren Dew - 12-06-2016 (12-05-2016, 06:38 PM)Mikebert Wrote:(12-04-2016, 05:15 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:(12-04-2016, 10:27 AM)Mikebert Wrote: Warren, I do not understand why you seem to want a much bigger federal debt/GDP ratio. I went to MIT; I do the equations and inequalities in my head. But sure, I can write them down for you, if that helps you understand the point: d(GDP/worker)/dt / (GDP/worker) > 0 (percentage individual worker productivity increases) d(workers)/dt / workers < - d(GDP/worker)/dt / (GDP/worker) (percentage worker population decreases faster than percentage worker productivity increases) d(GDP)/dt / GDP = d(workers*GDP/worker)/dt / (workers*GDP/worker) = (GDP/worker * d(workers)/dt + workers * d(GDP/worker)/dt) / (workers*GDP/worker) = d(workers)dt / workers + d(GDP/worker)/dt / GDP/worker < 0 (GDP decreases) d(population)/dt / population > 0 (percentage population increases as old people have retired but not died yet) d(GDP/population)/dt = population * d(GDP)/dt + GDP * d(population)/dt = population * GDP * (d(GDP)/dt / GDP - d(population)/dt / population) < 0 (average living standard for the economy cannot keep up) Just remember from your calculus that d(a*b)/dt = b*da/dt + a*db/dt and you should be all right here. This has been the macro situation in Japan since 1995: the employed population is falling proportionately faster than the productivity of those workers is rising, so GDP is falling, but still needs to support a rising population. Their population now seems to have peaked out, so things should at least not continue to get worse for them. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - playwrite - 12-06-2016 (12-05-2016, 05:37 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote:(12-05-2016, 04:50 PM)playwrite Wrote: Look at Warren's example to me of cutting payroll/income taxes of a plumber. He sees this as "supply side" because the plumber will reduce his price and a lot of people will hire more plumbers at that reduced price. I guess there is currently a lot of clogged toilets that are going to stay that way until Trump gets in and cuts those taxes. Let's hope it's early spring, can you imagine the smell??? Well, obviously, I'm a movie star! It has been found watching the debate from the sidelines. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - playwrite - 12-06-2016 (12-06-2016, 12:59 AM)Warren Dew Wrote:(12-05-2016, 06:38 PM)Mikebert Wrote:(12-04-2016, 05:15 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:(12-04-2016, 10:27 AM)Mikebert Wrote: Warren, I do not understand why you seem to want a much bigger federal debt/GDP ratio. This is the kind of horseshit math papering-over of pure conjecture that took neoClassical economics, particularly the Chicago School, into irrelevancy. You, being from MIT, have been caution against this ad naseum but for some reason it obviously didn't take. Your second equation is an assumption that, as Mike pointed out, goes against history, and that is a history that will be now compounded by automation. psss, the Luddite Fallacy is situational. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - playwrite - 12-06-2016 (12-05-2016, 04:52 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: People do remodel bathrooms based on whether they can afford it, you know. Certainly not other plumbers, and anyone else, who used their tax cut to lower the price of their labor. Where does the increase in demand come from if it was all given away? Maybe put that in an MIT iterative equation and smoke it. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Mikebert - 12-06-2016 (12-04-2016, 10:21 AM)Warren Dew Wrote: Hey, it was your link. Huh? No it wasn't. Where did you get that idea? RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Mikebert - 12-06-2016 (12-06-2016, 12:59 AM)Warren Dew Wrote: I went to MIT; I do the equations and inequalities in my head. But sure, I can write them down for you, if that helps you understand the point: This seems right. I will write it as: 1/GDP GDP’ = 1/LF LF’ + 1/P P’ where LF is labor force and P is worker productivity (GDP/LF) or in English GDP growth = productivity growth + worker growth (all relative (%) rates) All you are saying is that worker productivity rises slower than worker number rises. That is, you are assuming GDP growth is negative. You then use this to show that GDP growth is negative. But you already assumed this, its tautological. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Mikebert - 12-06-2016 Warren Dew Wrote:d(population)/dt / population > 0 (percentage population increases as old people have retired but not died yet)Using more compact notation you are saying: d(GDP/N)dt = N * dGDP/dt + GDP dN/dt this is the differentiation of the product of GDP and N, done correctly you would have d[GDP * (1/N)]/dt = (1/N) dGDP/dt - GDP (1/N)^2 (dN/dt) I'm still confused RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Warren Dew - 12-06-2016 I'm not assuming negative GDP growth; I'm looking at statistics from Japan, that show all the things I said. What I am assuming is that with the US doing the same demographic transition to a retiree heavy population that Japan did 2 decades ago, the effect on us is going to be similar, unless we use different policies. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Mikebert - 12-06-2016 (12-04-2016, 05:15 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:No I think you are confused. You are confusing with supply side policy as a political concept (cut taxes to incent work) with supply side as a economic concept (incent investment to boost productivity). The plumber's productivity is fixed. Cutting his taxes may allow him to pass some of it along to customers in the form of lower prices, or he may decide to keep it. Either way the net effect is to transfer some money that the government would spend to money that the plumber or you will spend.(12-04-2016, 10:27 AM)Mikebert Wrote: Warren, I do not understand why you seem to want a much bigger federal debt/GDP ratio. It provides no net growth. It simply replaces one spender (a Medicare health care provider in the first) with another a plumber or person doing bathroom remodeling. The real meat of supply side stimulus is to cut taxes on the job creators, that is investors, who with lower taxes are incented to invest in new business opportunities that they would otherwise not invest in. What you are advocating for is a form of Keynesian stimulus expressed in terms that are political palatable to conservatives. It sounds conservative and different from what Obama sought, but it is similar in effect, just mechanistically different in who get the stimulus. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Warren Dew - 12-06-2016 (12-06-2016, 03:51 PM)Mikebert Wrote:(12-06-2016, 12:59 AM)Warren Dew Wrote: I went to MIT; I do the equations and inequalities in my head. But sure, I can write them down for you, if that helps you understand the point: Reposting this to add the quote because another post intervened, making it unclear what I was responding to. Well, I am saying that worker productivity rises slower than worker number falls, rather than rises, if that's what you meant. That's not an assumption, though; I'm looking at statistics from Japan, that show that to be the case. What I am assuming is that with the US doing the a similar demographic transition to a retiree heavy population that Japan did 2 decades ago, the effect on us is also going to be similar, unless we use different policies. RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Ragnarök_62 - 12-06-2016 (11-28-2016, 02:58 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: Actually building the B-21 sounds like it would be good. No need to repeat the F-35 boondoggle fiasco, of course. Yeah, no kidding. Clusterfuck city big time. It's hard to match the the size of that money pit. I usually dish out this award to Eric, but in this case, the MIC gets its own * Dodo award to the MIC, man. ![]() ![]() RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Ragnarök_62 - 12-06-2016 (12-06-2016, 12:59 AM)Warren Dew Wrote:(12-05-2016, 06:38 PM)Mikebert Wrote:(12-04-2016, 05:15 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:(12-04-2016, 10:27 AM)Mikebert Wrote: Warren, I do not understand why you seem to want a much bigger federal debt/GDP ratio. Wow, look at all of that mathy stuff! It's time for some more awards. I have a double header here as well. Nothing like 2 male Boomers going at it. Nothing like "strutting yer stuff, eh? " Playwrite Wrote:Well, obviously, I'm a movie star! Whadda ya find? Moi? , like I said, lots of mathy stuff which induces METHy stuff in Rag's mind! ![]() ![]() ![]() * peacock award for Mikebert ![]() * peacock award for Warren ... this specimen has obviously been smoking meth. playwrite Wrote:Maybe put that in an MIT iterative equation and smoke it. Uh, like I said that peacock is smoking meth, not MIT iterative equations! Sheesh, get with the program man, just look at how fast that peacock is flapping his tail! ![]() RE: Lets make fun of Obama while he is still relevant. - Warren Dew - 12-07-2016 (12-06-2016, 04:06 PM)Mikebert Wrote:Warren Dew Wrote:d(population)/dt / population > 0 (percentage population increases as old people have retired but not died yet)Using more compact notation you are saying: Sorry, yes, messed up on that intermediate line. The conclusion is still the same, though. Derivation with the corrected equation below. d(GDP/worker)/dt / (GDP/worker) > 0 (percentage individual worker productivity increases) d(workers)/dt / workers < - d(GDP/worker)/dt / (GDP/worker) (percentage worker population decreases faster than percentage worker productivity increases) d(GDP)/dt / GDP = d(workers*GDP/worker)/dt / (workers*GDP/worker) = (GDP/worker * d(workers)/dt + workers * d(GDP/worker)/dt) / (workers*GDP/worker) = d(workers)dt / workers + d(GDP/worker)/dt / GDP/worker < 0 (GDP decreases) d(population)/dt / population > 0 (percentage population increases as old people have retired but not died yet) d(GDP/population)/dt = d(GDP)/dt / population - GDP * d(population)/dt / population^2 = (GDP/population) * (d(GDP)/dt / GDP - d(population)/dt / population) < 0 (average living standard for the economy cannot keep up) |