So, what do you suggest people do?
Hehe and who said that pot smokers are lazy dumb burnouts?
Great. It sounds more and more like I ougt to become fast friends with you Miss, I'll bring the guns, ammo, and cash, you supply the shelter and food.I think when the bottom falls out of shit, the pot smokers / growers are the ones that will stay fed.
We know how to kill inflation. Its really pretty simple. The hard part is having a politician that has the balls to do it. But, you just raise interest rates to nosebleed levels (20+%) that throws the nation into a deep recession, and prices stop going up - like oil in the past 6 months. But, you have to overkill.
Not trying to shoot you down or anything but that seems like a terrible idea, why would we ever do that could explain a bit more. I do agree with you that no politician would ever do that however, that would be suicide
That's why its so hard to do. No politician ever wants to deliberately throw the nation into a deep recession. After WW2 economists believed inflation was unavoidable. So, they thought, as long as we can keep it low...around 2%, we won't do that much damage, and we can accommodate the demands of a growing economy. Well, in the late 60s/early 70s...it got out of control...Never too high, but it got up to around 5-7% almost every year throughout the 70s. That doesn't sound like a whole lot. But, if you compound that rate year after year for a decade.........it doesn't take long to realize that it nearly costs double for everything. Well, after Reagan was elected, the country had had enough. Paul Volker was the Federal Reserve Chairman at the time, he got the o.k. from Reagan to do everything he could to kill inflation. He raised the short-term interest rates up to 20%. It took a while for long term interest rates to follow. Eventually, they got to around 15%. The recession lasted almost 18 months. And it was tough. The reason raising interest rates to nosebleed levels works is because you effectively withdraw money from the system. Whereas before, there always too much money chasing too few goods - causing prices to rise. Raising interest rates created a lack of money. Milton Friedman is famous for saying "inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomena." What that means is central banks creating too much money. Its important to remember that during the 80s, when we had a great economy, we still had relatively high interest rates. Interest rates have been coming down ever since Volker started lowering them after he choked off inflation. But, they came down slowly. Ask your parents what their mortgage rates were in the early 80s. But, expectations for inflation were killed, because interest rates were above the inflation level after that for a very long time - up until the 90s. Raising interest rates sends a message to savers. Don't spend! So, extra cash that would be running around chasing those few goods, is now locked up in savings because the rates are fantastic. Today, we have the exact opposite. Because our economy is so weak, the fed as lowered interest rates to basically zero. Its sending the message to savers - SPEND!
That's why its so hard to do. No politician ever wants to deliberately throw the nation into a deep recession. After WW2 economists believed inflation was unavoidable. So, they thought, as long as we can keep it low...around 2%, we won't do that much damage, and we can accommodate the demands of a growing economy. Well, in the late 60s/early 70s...it got out of control...Never too high, but it got up to around 5-7% almost every year throughout the 70s. That doesn't sound like a whole lot. But, if you compound that rate year after year for a decade.........it doesn't take long to realize that it nearly costs double for everything. Well, after Reagan was elected, the country had had enough. Paul Volker was the Federal Reserve Chairman at the time, he got the o.k. from Reagan to do everything he could to kill inflation. He raised the short-term interest rates up to 20%. It took a while for long term interest rates to follow. Eventually, they got to around 15%. The recession lasted almost 18 months. And it was tough. The reason raising interest rates to nosebleed levels works is because you effectively withdraw money from the system. Whereas before, there always too much money chasing too few goods - causing prices to rise. Raising interest rates created a lack of money. Milton Friedman is famous for saying "inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomena." What that means is central banks creating too much money. Its important to remember that during the 80s, when we had a great economy, we still had relatively high interest rates. Interest rates have been coming down ever since Volker started lowering them after he choked off inflation. But, they came down slowly. Ask your parents what their mortgage rates were in the early 80s. But, expectations for inflation were killed, because interest rates were above the inflation level after that for a very long time - up until the 90s. Raising interest rates sends a message to savers. Don't spend! So, extra cash that would be running around chasing those few goods, is now locked up in savings because the rates are fantastic. Today, we have the exact opposite. Because our economy is so weak, the fed as lowered interest rates to basically zero. Its sending the message to savers - SPEND!
cool yeah i get all the stuff about monetary policy and interest rates stimulating investment, i'm actually studying for my macro exam so all of the discussion helps me remeber it lol, interesting read didn't know all that volker stuff. one of the things i'm learning about at the moment is phillips curves, one theory presented based on rational rather than adaptive expectations is that if the gov announces info on its plans and policies,the private sector, as long as they trust them, should react and accordingly adjust their expectations, meaning lower wages which means that firms don't need to reduce supply until wages catch up, meaning no increase in unemployment. Is that reasonable to assume or is it one of those building blocks that will be proved wrong as i read on.
Did Clinton not manage to reduce inflation with no adverse effects to employment? or was that something i imagined, i'm pretty clueless to real life economics lol so its good to put it all in context
I want a homestead, where I can produce my own foods and not have to pay grocery store prices. Yes there will be some things we would still have to buy. The bad thing about it is, every year the IL state gov. will have their hand out expecting me to pay them for the privilage of owning my own property.
What a bunch of shit, when you buy a home, it should be yours. Big Gov needs to learn to tighten then belt and do a lot more with a lot less cash, welcome to the world of the people.
So I had heard back last summer that the people of Mass. (I think) had gotten together a petition or something to end property tax in their state. They decided that their state lawmakers could cut back and try to budget in a more responsible manner. I haven't heard anything else about it. I wonder if they got it passed, or if the thing just died out.........
After that, Question 1 advocates hoped that frustration with government waste as well as fatigue from strained family budgets would lead many of the state's 3.4 million workers to strike a blow against the 5.3-percent income tax. "We're getting taxed to death in Massachusetts," said Bernie Friesecke, a North Reading voter who contributed $85 to the Committee for Small Government so that it could make its antitax voice heard against the heavily played message of the Coalition for Our Communities.
"God almighty, that's what really burns my tail. You get these television ads that tell you we're going to lose this, that, and the other thing," said Friesecke, a 78-year-old retired aeronautical engineer. "No one's ever telling you that we've got corruption and spending on stuff we don't need, in huge quantities."
The Coalition for Our Communities, which led the opposition to Question 1, outspent the question's sponsors by a roughly 10-to-1 margin. That enabled them to pay for a flurry of TV ads and a sophisticated voter ID effort to identify likely and swing voters. Among other tactics, they sent full-color, personalized mailers that incorporated a voter's name and community into the images and warned of specific local cuts.