Showing posts with label Capitalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Capitalism. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

US Budget Deficit

Click on the title to link. This Administration spends money like nobody's business. The long-term consequences will be far reaching and severe. You just cannot continue spending money like this without problems. Yet, here we are.
This is without a doubt the scariest statement in this entire article:
"This recession was simply worse than the information that we and other forecasters had back in last fall and early this winter," said Obama economic adviser Christina Romer.

Are you serious, Christina? Do we have stupid stamped on our foreheads? And you advise the President on the economy? Lord, help us all then. I am curious, why is it that everybody else in the country knew it was this serious then? And why did you rush through a stimulus bill of hundreds of billions of dollars? What a cop out! If you don't agree with this quote (Republican or Democrat) then you are in denial:
"The alarm bells on our nation's fiscal condition have now become a siren," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said. "If anyone had any doubts that this burden on future generations is unsustainable, they're gone — spending, borrowing and debt are out of control."

Monday, March 9, 2009

Cliff Diving, Anyone?

It is hard to ignore a guy as smart as Warren Buffet. This is an interesting interview worth watching and noting (especially to all in Washington, DC).











Friday, March 6, 2009

The Devaluing of the Dollar

Robin Hood?

With the current Administrations policies coming more and more clear, this is a quote somebody sent to us that seems very relative. Tell us what you think, because if they do what they say they want to do then this is exactly where we are headed.
"You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it."
Dr. Adrian Rogers

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Tax Hikes

We really do try not to get to "political" on this blog, but when we see things that will have trickle down effects on things like mortgage rates and real estate we do like to discuss them. This is an interesting article about the proposed tax hikes in the 2010 budget Obama just proposed. Hang on because this could get ugly.


By Phil Kerpen
Director of Policy, Americans for Prosperity
The composition of the tax hikes in the 2010 budget is frighteningly similar to the Revenue Act of 1932, the much-maligned Hoover tax hikes that put the “Great” in Great Depression by putting an enormous tax burden on millions of Americans, largely through excise taxes. These taxes, raised even further by FDR, were justified by the promise that the funds would be returned in the form of relief programs, which is to say that some portion of the tax revenue, after administrative costs in Washington, would go back to the states with strings attached, often to further political rather than economic objectives.

The Obama budget blueprint, like the 1932 act, is split mainly between broad excise taxes and income tax hikes on high income earners. Unfortunately, there were no 10-years projections back then, so I had to use one year numbers, but it’s still an interesting comparison.

The 2010 budget assumes, probably correctly, that the only way to generate a big revenue increase in the face of severe economic weakness is to use a tax mechanism–the excise tax–that is collected in relatively small increments across millions of transactions made by Americans of all income levels. That is a direct lesson of 1932, when the income tax on the rich–then the only people who paid income taxes–was raised to capture as much revenue as possible before
high-income earners fled the country or stopped working. Then, as now, that amount was about 0.3 percent of GDP.

Excise taxes did most of the revenue work in the 1932 act, including excises on everything from trucks, tires, jewelry, chewing gum, and soft drinks to gasoline and electricity. Those last two are especially interesting in light of the carbon cap-and-trade proposal in the 2010 budget, which is a de facto excise tax on those items as well as every other energy technology that relies on the most affordable energy sources: natural gas, oil, and coal.

Despite President Obama’s promise that “If your family earns less than $250,000 a year, you will not see your taxes increase a single dime. I repeat: not one single dime,” his new budget raises 45 percent of its revenue from energy taxes that will be paid by everyone who fills a gas tank, pays an electric bill, or buys anything that was grown, shipped, or manufactured.

While the overall tax hike is smaller than 1932 (0.9 percent of GDP versus 1.6 percent of GDP) and the excise/energy component is only half the size (0.4 percent of GDP versus 0.8 percent of GDP) there is every reason to believe that the bite of the cap-and-trade tax will increase considerably beyond the initial projections, making this plan even more resemble 1932.

The cap-and-trade provisions are designed to get much, much more expensive over time, making the total impact hard to quantify but likely to be as or more expensive than the 1932 Revenue Act. In fact, Obama’s version of cap-and-trade is much more expensive than last year’s already outrageous Lieberman-Warner bill, mandating emissions cuts of 83 percent versus 63 percent in last year’s version.

I didn’t include the death tax in the chart, because there was no revenue estimate for it in 1932, but that’s another eerie parallel. In 1932 the rate was hiked from 20 percent to 45 percent, and in 2010, under Obama’s proposal (which is hidden in a footnote in the budget) it will go from zero under current law to that same 45 percent rate.

If we continue down a path of repeating the policies of the 1930s we risk a repeat of the same results. Let’s hope Congress has the good sense to say no to
these Hoover-style tax hikes.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Socialist America?

Click on the title to link. Well, welcome to socialist America. We continue to slip into a socialist country at break neck speed. Here is our question about this proposed mortgage bailout plan, what about all those people who are also having a hard go with the economy who have made sure to keep their mortgage payment current? How does this give incentive for anybody to actually pay their mortgage? Why not just let it go so lenders will renegotiate to a lower payment? We are not saying we have all the answers, but this ain't it.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Pathetic

I could not think of a title more fitting than the word "Pathetic" what the article I just read. It is linked above through the title. The article is about how the almost $200 billion given to banks has done little to nothing in stimulating lending. What else would you expect from a "stimulus" that was rushed through and not managed. They should be ashamed.
And for those of you who want to take this opportunity to blame the Bush Administration remember this:
1. Obama is trying to now push through his package. if they do not step back and work the details out prior to then we will be right back here again.
2. Both McCain and Obama backed this plan because it was a political "spotlight" on them.
3. You want more government involvement and help? Be careful what you ask for because you may just get it.
So I do not care what party you are affiliated with, they all should be ashamed for letting something like this happen. It is unacceptable, shameful and, well, pathetic.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Rates Are On The Rise

The last week has been a tough week for rates. Why is it that rates are rising when there continues to be, primarily, nothing but bad news released? Well, that is not a short answer, but it is interesting (or at least it is to our sick little minds).
In the past, rates have followed 10 year bonds. As bonds were up (or the yield was down; they move opposite of each other)then rates were down. But rates have stopped following bonds so definitively. We are not sure exactly what they are following right now, to be honest. But we are looking into that.
The problem right now is as our government continues to bail businesses out that increases the debt the Treasury needs to sell. The typical buyers for that debt is other countries. Well, those countries have their own problems right now and are spending their money on their own country's problems right now. That means we are having a hard time finding people to buy our debt and, therefore, fund all this debt. That is causing rates to rise, as a result. Here is a good summary of it in this article.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Don't Blame Capitalism

And just in case some of you want to blame Capitalism for this mess we are in, this is a great article by Peter Schiff regarding just that subject. Our fear is that if the new Administration does what it says it will do (which is bigger government, boardering on outright Socialism) then it will push us into a potential depression. Stay tuned...
Click here for the aricles link.