@WhoWee. Just disregard any of my rather sweeping opinions that you don't agree with.
Assuming that there is a problem with the economy, then what can be done? It seems that giving money to the rich has been tried. So, I'm just suggesting that we give some money to the poor, like they did in Brazil, and see what happens. In the latter case at least we're helping people who need help, even if it wouldn't, by itself, 'resurrect' the economy. And yes of course this wasn't the only factor that helped Brazils economy. But, is anyone arguing that it didn't help or that it hurt their economy?
The really big problem for the federal and state governments is wrt pensions, medicare, medicaid, social security and that sort of stuff. Isn't it?
Regarding job creation, well, there's only a certain amount of stuff that needs to be done, and there's only a certain amount of people needed to do it. What's going to happen, say, 100 years from now if there are, say, 50 million working-age adults who simply aren't needed in the workforce? Are we seeing the beginning of that sort of trend now?
I agree with you that the government has to curtail its spending habits. So far it hasn't.
The situation seems to be that we're going to have to depend on the government to create programs that will increase employment. And this would seem to entail giving money to the relatively poor, not the relatively rich. As I mentioned, the rich already have enough money to create jobs if they want to. Apparently they don't want to.
Proton Soup said:
i have my doubts that it would work in america. we have a debt hamster wheel economy. if you give money to the "poor", the banks are going to expect them to use it to pay off their visa bill.
They're not going to use it to pay off visa bills if their credit is already compromised -- which it might well be. So, odds are that they'll spend it on goods and services in their local stores. And, best case scenario, some of them will actually use the money to help capitalize small business ventures of their own.
Here's the thing. You give a few thousand dollars to a poor person who has some skills but is having trouble finding steady employment and you've opened a whole new world of possibilities to him/her.
CAC1001 said:
Handing out money to the poor will make them spend money, sure. But it must first be taxed away from the people producing it, who themselves would have spent it if it had not been taxed away.
This is a very good point. However, insofar as it might be argued that the government is spending a good portion of their tax money unnecessarily, then it might be argued that combining a reduction in unnecessary government spending with the sort of 'giveaway' that's being considered might actually benefit everyone.
CAC1001 said:
It also makes it where the poor won't work because you are paying them not to.
I don't think that's the case. I think that most people would much rather make, say, 2000/month working than 500/month not working. The problem is that lots of capable and willing people really can't find jobs. That seems to indicate that there are more willing workers than are needed in the workforce. I can take a tour of South Florida's neighborhoods and find, literally, hundreds if not thousands of people who desparately want a day's work. Let's assume that these are honest people who want nothing more than an honest day's pay for an honest day's work. Well, there just isn't any work for most of them. And compared to lots of areas in the US, South Florida's economy isn't so bad (primarily because of the tourism, and the steady incomes of pensioners and retirees like myself).
CAC1001 said:
Thus you end up with a growing number of people leeching off of the smaller number of people being taxed to support them.
Well, I think that most people would prefer not to be 'leeching'. But, as I mentioned in my reply above to Who Wee, it might be case that the percentage of the US working-age population not needed in the workforce will steadily increase.
CAC1001 said:
You can stimulate an economy during a recession by sending checks of additional money to poorer and middle income folk as a gift in the hopes they'll spend it, but you can't do this permanently.
I agree. It's a temporary aid to the resolution of, hopefully, a temporary problem. The overall solution will involve reducing unnecessary government spending, increasing taxation on certain individuals, corporate entities, and certain goods and services, and government creation of large programs employing millions of people. There really is lots and lots of stuff that needs to be done on a nationwide scale. And the federal government is the only entity large enough to underwrite it.
CAC1001 said:
The idea is to get them BACK to work by increasing consumer demand to create more jobs ...
Right, so you increase consumer spending by creating more jobs or by giving money to the people who will spend the money in the general economy. The portion of our population that is able to create more jobs isn't doing so. So, there are two options (1) give some money to those who don't have it, and/or (2) government creation of jobs.
CAC1001 said:
You can also create economic growth via taxes if your country is in big need of infrastructure development, so you tax and use the taxes to create roads, bridges, railroads, ports, electricity, water treatment, etc...and thus then areas turn into booming economies.
I agree. And I bet that this is eventually going to happen. There's lots of taxes that can be increased besides personal income. But I wouldn't want to see increases in taxes without a concommitant decrease in unnecessary government spending.