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US Debt now > GDP |
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| Nov7-11, 10:59 AM | #86 |
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US Debt now > GDP |
| Nov7-11, 10:59 AM | #87 |
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For instance the small town I live in was founded in 1680 something (9 miles south of center of downtown) the only options for getting into town are 2 lane roads with 35 mile an hour speed limits and red lights every couple hundred yards. Crossing through more then a dozen police jurisdictions. It takes 45 minutes to get into town with out traffic. Or you can drive 30 miles and cricle around and come in I-279 and it still takes 45 minutes with out traffic. Anyway lets get back on topic |
| Nov7-11, 12:07 PM | #88 |
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| Nov7-11, 01:00 PM | #89 |
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I never said most expensive I also do not think it matters every location will have its problems. Regardless infrastructuire spending is important but it should not be debt spending and perferabbly not federal funding at all. |
| Nov7-11, 02:14 PM | #90 |
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| Nov7-11, 02:16 PM | #91 |
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| Nov12-11, 09:49 PM | #92 |
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Blog Entries: 3
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I read something interesting today:
I wonder what implications this will have on future interest rates on government debt. |
| Dec9-11, 06:07 PM | #93 |
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I finally figured it out. It's all political humbug, the 40 cts on the dollar borrowing being bad.
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/20...-last-quarter/ The US didn't get any poorer, the debt is shifting from households to the government. They are just keeping the equilibrium in place at a lower interest rate. |
| Dec9-11, 06:21 PM | #95 |
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| Dec10-11, 04:35 PM | #96 |
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| Dec16-11, 04:10 PM | #97 |
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I still think wowwees point about towns that can not afford to maintain infrastructure is important.
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| Dec16-11, 07:08 PM | #98 |
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How did these places originally afford to build this expensive infrastructure that they're no longer capable of maintaining?
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| Dec16-11, 07:24 PM | #99 |
Recognitions:
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Sewer repair and construction in London, 1845: http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/...x440_popup.jpg http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/...x440_popup.jpg |
| Dec20-11, 09:42 PM | #100 |
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Given the huge chunk of our budget health care takes every year, perhaps instead of concerning ourselves with cutting this program or that, and frankly whining, people should get off their lazy boys, exercise, and stop having preventable illnesses?
If anyone's to blame, its everyone. |
| Jan31-12, 10:00 AM | #101 |
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| Jan31-12, 10:25 AM | #102 |
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The odd thing is that despite the growing public debt, the interest on public debt remains really low -probably that low that value is being destroyed,- for which I have no explanation except for that the money doesn't have anywhere else to go.
Is there anyone who really understands that phenomenon? I have an hypothesis that with the housing bubble that much money was created that, after it deflated, all that money has to move from private to public debt or otherwise the financial system blows up. But that hypothesis may well be horsedung. And I am still not sure whether federal public debt is 70% or 100% of US GDP since different numbers are sometimes reported. What are the real numbers? |
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