PearlWatson
Well-Known Member
Hence, the use of "stimulus" as opposed to "something the Federal government had".
How do you calculate 40% of a response that hasn't happened?
Hence, the use of "stimulus" as opposed to "something the Federal government had".
Not everyone would agree with that. For example:
https://abcnews.go.com/blogs/busine...n-secret-tax-havens-says-tax-justice-network/
"Super-Rich Hide $21 Trillion in Secret Tax Havens, Says Tax Justice Network"[/i]
You accuse me of thinking that if money exists it always goes to job creating ventures. I accuse you of thinking that if money exists it won't... it will simply sit there and look pretty for rich people and not be utilized to stimulate the economy.
Letting it sit in an account in the Cayman Islands is not circulating it in this economy. It might be doing something for the economy in the Cayman Islands, but it isn't doing much (or anything) for the economy in SLC.
How do you calculate 40% of a response that hasn't happened?
So, you are acknowledging that the tax cuts created no response?
I get your point and actually agree with it, but... The iPad??? The iPad is made in China. I'm sure it created plenty of jobs over there. In the USA though, I bet there are a lot more people who own an iPhone but not an iPad than vice versa. Not sure how many jobs it created in the USA.Keep in mind the iPad was introduced right smack dab in the middle of a full blown Recession. Yet it seemed to do OK for itself. I realize that's not a new company, it's a new product - but the popularity of the iPad did "create jobs" by increasing the size and scope of Apple and its' product line.
I get that. My point is jobs created in the Cayman Islands don't do us Americans much (or any) good.Salty, you are taking something completely unrelated and twisting it around to your perspective.
They aren't putting the money in offshore accounts to completely withdraw the funds from the global economy. They are putting it there to avoid paying taxes. If you think that money isn't earning interest, you're crazy. And how does it earn interest? Easy. The bank lends the money to people that need it, and collects interest payments. The money is still in circulation in the economy. Perhaps not the U.S. economy specifically, but it is out there sparking worldwide growth of some fashion or another.
I get that. My point is jobs created in the Cayman Islands is not doing us Americans any good.
Franklin wrote "....to claim a loss to offset gains elsewhere. The Romney's do not have this option with this horse unless this horse makes actual money."I didn't read franklin's quote that way at all.
I want you to explain what the 40% is a measure of.
Change in budget appropriations to accomodate the stimulus.
I get your point and actually agree with it, but... The iPad??? The iPad is made in China. I'm sure it created plenty of jobs over there. In the USA though, I bet there are a lot more people who own an iPhone but not an iPad than vice versa. Not sure how many jobs it created in the USA.
Lol, I misread that. I thought you were saying I wanted to beg from my neighbors (entitlement attitude or whatever you were saying before).
And if the jobs were just created here in the first place, it would be stimulating our economy even more.Sure, it created hundreds and thousands of jobs over in China. At a wage that is a fraction of the wages that are paid here. We could create 1/10th the jobs here related to the product, yet be stimulating our economy more than China's because the money paid to wage earners here is so much more than there.
Sure, it created hundreds and thousands of jobs over in China. At a wage that is a fraction of the wages that are paid here. We could create 1/10th the jobs here related to the product, yet be stimulating our economy more than China's because the money paid to wage earners here is so much more than there.
Of course. Of course you did. You know, for a know-it-all pushing caveman economic theology, you have a tendency to miss some of the most basic economic principles.
BTW, I'm waiting for your imperical data supporting your fanatical claim regarding outsourcing. Would you like me to provide the literature for you?
BTW, I'm waiting for your imperical data supporting your fanatical claim regarding outsourcing. Would you like me to provide the literature for you?
My "data" is the reality of the US economy. No need for BS theories when you just have to look out the window.
It's a trap. Demand an actual quote, not just a link to a treatise that fails to substantiate his opinion .