b) convince the media and the voters that slashing spending is the right way to pull out of a depression, despite the mountain of evidence to the contrary (including plenty of new evidence from the past few years).
Absolutely right. They saw political opportunity in convincing the population that the country was almost bankrupt, in order to win the election. Well, great... It worked. But they also obliterated consumer confidence in the process, and as a result, what would have been bad times have become even worse.Seriously, that was the biggest mistake the Tories have done, they have pretty much convinced the country not spend money which is stupid in an economic downturn.
Look up "Laffer Curve" in Google my friend.
It's definitively proven that if you raise taxes too far your revenue DECREASES and if you look at the figures released just this week you'll see that's what happened when the top tax rate went up to 50%. I'm not earning enough to pay that rate, but even I can see the futility of charging it when you're not making any extra from it.
Compared to last year, State tax collections for February shriveled by $1.2 billion or 22%. The deterioration is more than double the shocking $535 million reported decline for last month. The cumulative fiscal year decline is $6.1 billion or down 11% versus this period in 2011.
Vranich considers California the worst state in the nation to locate a business and Los Angeles is considered the worst city to start a business. Leaving Los Angeles for another surrounding county can save businesses 20% of costs. Leaving the state for Texas can save up to 40% of costs. This probably explains why California lost 120,000 jobs last year and Texas gained 130,000 jobs.
From the mid-1980s to 2005, California's population grew by 10 million, while Medicaid recipients soared by seven million; tax filers paying income taxes rose by just 150,000; and the prison population swelled by 115,000.
California's economy, which used to outperform the rest of the country, now substantially underperforms. The unemployment rate, at 10.9%, is higher than every other state except Nevada and Rhode Island. With 12% of America's population, California has one third of the nation's welfare recipients.
It's a shame that as a result, Texas is running a ridiculous budget deficit, having to cut even more spending, making the problem worse, ad infinitum.Not just companies leaving but workers leaving too for places like Texas.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...7277242682364690.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_LEADTop
Comcast is the latest to leave.
http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_21628027/comcast-will-slash-1-000-jobs-including-more
I thought this said "Condoms have run up largest ever UK Debt"
I thought this said "Condoms have run up largest ever UK Debt"
If you knew anything about the laffer curve you should know that 50% is well below it.Look up "Laffer Curve" in Google my friend.
It's definitively proven that if you raise taxes too far your revenue DECREASES and if you look at the figures released just this week you'll see that's what happened when the top tax rate went up to 50%. I'm not earning enough to pay that rate, but even I can see the futility of charging it when you're not making any extra from it.
The banks arn't the reason why the western world is in debt, it was the straw that broke the camels back but we have all been getting into debt for a long time by not exporting enough and simply importing everything from China.
If it was the banks then why does Chinese government have more cash than it knows what to do with? Their banks had to deal with the USAs crap credit rating system aswell.
America doesn't collect enough tax from the rich imho which is their main flaw, Britains public sector and spending got a bit out of hand in the last 10 years.
Both countries will sort it out and sadly it's going to take a few years yet.
When you have a single clue what you're talking about come back, till then get a grip.
Here's a little hint, ONS decide the deficit is the difference between what comes in to the government and what they spend ignoring all investments.
EVERYONE else looks at net borrowing to determine deficit.
When Labour left power we had a deficit by way of total public borrowing(and debt we load onto the country) of about £170billion, or deficit according to ONS, was just over £110billion.
The "real" figure IS £170billion, that is how much we borrowed full stop that is how much was added onto our debt.
If you can tell me how in one quarter we have hit record deficit, when even according to their own numbers we hit £110billion (with the mostly pointless lower number) that is more than 4 times the figure they are now quoting as a record, go ahead.
In reality Labour left us with a deficit of £170billion, divide that by four and see if the 20billion in a quarter is some kind of new terrible record due to Conservative incompetence.
It's way way way way .... way way way way .... way way way easier to run up a £170billion deficit than it is to bring that back down. Almost every cut means someone losing out somewhere, Brown bought us out of a recession... with no sensible economy growth, infact with years and years of ruining the underlying economy, and he loaded massive completely previously unseen levels of debt and spending on the public sector to "fake" our way out of a recession.
The only way that plan would have continued to work was by continually every year massively increasing the deficit... we'd be talking about well over £200billion deficit to keep that idiotic plan going.
Due to inflation, "records" in every sector, in every statistic happen constantly. Record average wage as we hit £23k, because the year before it was £22.8k, and 50 years earlier it was £5k, because... money is worth less and we get more of it.
Another way to look at it, whats better, 20billion one quarter and 5billion in the other 3 quarters, or 19billion every quarter? One simple loan, completely meaningless statistic on its own is worth... nothing.
I thought this said "Condoms have run up largest ever UK Debt"
In fairness debt as a ratio to gdp before the crisis was reasonably healthy but borrowing exploded under labour when it hit as they desperately tried to prop up the system.
Labours idea of spending a few hundred billion creating false demand in the economy scares me because if it doesn't work we could end up with high interest rates which will negate any benefits of increased government spending and another few hundred billion for our kids to pay off over the next few decades.
If you knew anything about the laffer curve you should know that 50% is well below it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:LafferCurve.svg&page=1
Also,
"It's also a theory which has been widely discredited, both on a theoretical level and in practice. Because with the Laffer curve – perhaps unusually for economics – we have a historical instance of it being implemented by a direct proponent. Laffer was an associate of the Reagan administration, which had a staged cut in the marginal higher rate of personal income tax from 70% to 28%. The effect on the budget deficit was also striking. Reagan doubled it to $155 billion and tripled government debt to more than $2trillion. His successor, Bush senior, was forced to raise taxes as the deficit doubled again."
well when you cut useful services that poor people use and need, and give tax breaks to millionaires and corporations, it doesnt take a genius to work out what they are doing.
This thread fails due to a complete lack of understanding of key terms. here is a hint, the guardian article has nothing to do with the public sector deficit or debt.... or indeed government spending at all.
When you have a single clue what you're talking about come back, till then get a grip.
Here's a little hint, ONS decide the deficit is the difference between what comes in to the government and what they spend ignoring all investments.
EVERYONE else looks at net borrowing to determine deficit.
When Labour left power we had a deficit by way of total public borrowing(and debt we load onto the country) of about £170billion, or deficit according to ONS, was just over £110billion.
The "real" figure IS £170billion, that is how much we borrowed full stop that is how much was added onto our debt.