RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (Full Version)

All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion



Message


DarkSteven -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 5:51:56 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

quote:

ORIGINAL: DarkSteven

All right.  Here's the story.

Back when Reagan was President, he created the idea of "trickle-down".  The theory was that, since the wealthy have the means to create companies and therefore jobs, the key to job creation is to give the rich more money.

So they got more money and they spent some and held on to some of it.

The simple truths are:

1. Companies do not hire because they have extra money and can't figure out what to do with it except to hire.  They hire because they need more people to produce product or service.  In other words, the jobs are created by market demand, not excess capital.
2. The wealthy will save a greater percentage of income than the poor, many of whom have already spent more than they have (e.g., payday loan places).  So giving extra cash to the wealthy will not stimulate the economy as much as giving it to the less well off.
3. Bush 43 gave tax cuts to everyone.  Result: deficit ballooned, unemployment rose, the gap between rich and poor widened.



2. Incorrect. Savings and investment stimulate the economy more than spending. Thats why spending has a 1.5 multiple and tax cuts a multiple of 3. The impact of the fraction of the tax cuts not spent overwhelm the value of the spending.
3. The Bush tax cuts led to a remarkably strong economy despite the challenges of the Clinton recession, the burst of the Internet bubble and 9/11. Not their fault that they couldnt overcome the housing bubble bursting.


2. By "saving and investment", I assume that you mean stock ownership, correct?  I don't know what you mean by "the economy" - I mean an environment where companies are hiring and people are able to get jobs.  People are feeling able to leave their jobs to get better ones, and companies are concerned with employee retention and satisfaction.

When you use those multipliers, they look like they're out of some model.  There have been models such as the Laffer curve that purport to show that the Bush/Reagan policies will work.  It's pretty easy to come up with theoretical models to support viewpoints - I frankly wouldn't put much stock in some model telling me what's best unless it's been tested.

I consider your post here:
quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

It is against the law to not act in the best interests of the shareholders. If their best interests are served by maximizing current profits, that it would be illegal to not do so.


(which I agree with) to be equivalent to a statement that investment does not necessarily result in higher employment, if the money could be used for another means that does not cause hiring.  Or hiring overseas people....

3. Evidently you are making the case that under W, the economy was strong.  No way.  In his first term, he very nearly became the first President since Hoover to preside over a drop in actual jobs worked.  There WAS no Clinton recession, although I will give you that some of the prosperity was the Internet bubble. And the Bush disaster would have been worse if the RE bubble had deflated earlier than in his last few months on the job.

I reiterate that the deficit ballooned under him, unemployment increased, and the gap between rich and poor widened.  I fail to see any of that as the mark of a strong economy as you indicate.




barelynangel -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 5:57:39 AM)

You know what also would help, people stop getting into debt trying to live beyond their means.  THAT didn't just happen overnight and no, don't start saying people are in debt because they lost jobs or need it to feed their kids that's bullshit and everyone knows it.  20 years ago this all started because people think they were OWED something so they decided to use credit to buy luxuries they wanted thinking that the time to pay up never would really come, then suddenly you see a downward plunge of the economy and creditors taking away the toys of credit cards etc and demanding payment of money spent and alll of a sudden, many people are saying but but but its the wealthy people's fault, i don't have a job, excuse after excuse. 

All in all, it gets tiring hearing people whine about how they are owed something, how the wealthy owe them something and they sit with debt up to their ears because suddenly their own irresponsibility is being forced back on them and they feel the pressure of their own living beyond their means.  Now they are losing houses, they are having to pay off their debts, they aren't allowed credit and the economy has slowed and people were losing jobs and they have to struggle.

Yeah its all the wealthy people's fault.  If you choose to act helpless and say people OWE you something because wahhhhhh they have more money than you do, then to me you deserve what you get.  I am not saying its easy or that everyone is stuck in struggling is due to irresponsibility but to me, people are used to being afforded a concept of luxury because of credit, now its gone and people don't know how to live within their means.  Maybe its time, to change that.  Maybe its not that people were living higher but they were simply living beyond their means and now all of that cushion was taken away.

angel




willbeurdaddy -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 8:22:32 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: DarkSteven

quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

quote:

ORIGINAL: DarkSteven

All right.  Here's the story.

Back when Reagan was President, he created the idea of "trickle-down".  The theory was that, since the wealthy have the means to create companies and therefore jobs, the key to job creation is to give the rich more money.

So they got more money and they spent some and held on to some of it.

The simple truths are:

1. Companies do not hire because they have extra money and can't figure out what to do with it except to hire.  They hire because they need more people to produce product or service.  In other words, the jobs are created by market demand, not excess capital.
2. The wealthy will save a greater percentage of income than the poor, many of whom have already spent more than they have (e.g., payday loan places).  So giving extra cash to the wealthy will not stimulate the economy as much as giving it to the less well off.
3. Bush 43 gave tax cuts to everyone.  Result: deficit ballooned, unemployment rose, the gap between rich and poor widened.



2. Incorrect. Savings and investment stimulate the economy more than spending. Thats why spending has a 1.5 multiple and tax cuts a multiple of 3. The impact of the fraction of the tax cuts not spent overwhelm the value of the spending.
3. The Bush tax cuts led to a remarkably strong economy despite the challenges of the Clinton recession, the burst of the Internet bubble and 9/11. Not their fault that they couldnt overcome the housing bubble bursting.


2. By "saving and investment", I assume that you mean stock ownership, correct?  I don't know what you mean by "the economy" - I mean an environment where companies are hiring and people are able to get jobs.  People are feeling able to leave their jobs to get better ones, and companies are concerned with employee retention and satisfaction.

When you use those multipliers, they look like they're out of some model.  There have been models such as the Laffer curve that purport to show that the Bush/Reagan policies will work.  It's pretty easy to come up with theoretical models to support viewpoints - I frankly wouldn't put much stock in some model telling me what's best unless it's been tested.

I consider your post here:
quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

It is against the law to not act in the best interests of the shareholders. If their best interests are served by maximizing current profits, that it would be illegal to not do so.


(which I agree with) to be equivalent to a statement that investment does not necessarily result in higher employment, if the money could be used for another means that does not cause hiring.  Or hiring overseas people....

3. Evidently you are making the case that under W, the economy was strong.  No way.  In his first term, he very nearly became the first President since Hoover to preside over a drop in actual jobs worked.  There WAS no Clinton recession, although I will give you that some of the prosperity was the Internet bubble. And the Bush disaster would have been worse if the RE bubble had deflated earlier than in his last few months on the job.

I reiterate that the deficit ballooned under him, unemployment increased, and the gap between rich and poor widened.  I fail to see any of that as the mark of a strong economy as you indicate.


A couple of incorrect assumptions and some obfuscation or ignorance of the facts:
2. No, by saving and investment I mean exactly that. Putting money in the bank (which due to fractional reserve accounting and the loans that banks make) help drive the economy. "Stock investment" is too narrow a term as commonly used for investment, since it doesnt take into account Sub S and partnerships, which in our economy account for more growth than publicly traded companies.

The multiplier "models" are from Obama's former advisor Cristina Romer and her husband. They are not "theories" they are based on empirical data.

I agree, investment does not NECCESSARILY result in more employment. However, lack of investment NECESSARILY means no additional employment.


As far as 3 goes, dont be ridiculous. Clinton left with a recession and drop in jobs due to the internet bubble. The start of the recession was originally pegged as March 2001 and was later recognized/revised to have started many months earlier. Unemployment until 2008 was the same or lower as under Clinton and only dropped in 2008 because of the financial crisis that GWB did his best to avoid. The deficit under Bush "ballooned" during the Democrat run House. The only large spending plan pushed by Bush besides two wars was prescription drugs, a mistake I agree, but also the only program that actually cost what it was priced at.

The Clinton economy WAS the internet bubble, the housing bubble, and ill-advised reductions in defense spending....all false prosperity that we are paying for now. Even Obama is getting some of the blame for what originated under Clintons watch.

You fail to see what you dont want to see.




Louve00 -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 8:37:06 AM)

I'm sort of with DS here.  Can you please provide some proof that there was a recession during Clinton's administration?  And how is it the following president can sit in office for a decade and let it all happen (saying I told them so doesn't count...action counts!...and Pelosi, Frank and the rest of them all didn't run the house for the entire decade and certainly not during Clinton's rule either, to back peddle that far.

I feel this way.  If you give a poor man money he spends it.  If you give a rich man money he saves it.  Spending is what everyone is trying to get the "poor man" to do right now because they say that will stimulate the economy.  So, while I'm not suggesting anyone spend their money in any certain way, I have to wonder how socking money away is going to stimulate anything but the socker's financial security? 

And that trickle down mentality obviously hasn't worked from the get go.  Literally billions were given to "trickle down", starting with the end of Bush's term and continuing with Obama's turn...and again, show me proof of anything trickling down.  I wonder if they had taken all those billions to save America from itself and giving it to the poor man, instead of the rich man (who are the guys who ultimately blew it, with the A-OK from the whitehouse and congress), I wonder how much would have "trickled up"?  We won't go there because we all know the answer when it comes to what trickles.




Hillwilliam -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 8:45:12 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy


quote:

ORIGINAL: Hippiekinkster


It's not a question of turning a profit. They can do that. Offshoring is all about maximizing profit. The notion that the sole function of a corporation is to maximize the return on investment for shareholders has become so ingrained that many people believe that it is against the law for a corporation NOT to do so.



It is against the law to not act in the best interests of the shareholders. If their best interests are served by maximizing current profits, that it would be illegal to not do so.


Wilbur, if honestly believe that directors act in the best interest of shareholders, I've got a bridge I'll sell ya. I worked for a company that was 'enronned' before that company was ever heard of. Know what? It was the 7th company this particular bunch of 'venture capitalists' had done this to.
Ours was the only one that didnt go bankrupt in the process of these guys making 7 figures on a short sale.


Wanna know what is really cool? No even though they were caught by the SEC, there was no jail time (even though one of them had a felony interstate mail fraud conviction from a previous job). They just got kicked out to do it elsewhere.

The stockholders? Well, we saw shares go from $7/share to a few pennies. (yes I had several thousand).

Bottom line is that directors do what is good for the directors and fuck the stockholders.




DarkSteven -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 9:23:17 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

2. No, by saving and investment I mean exactly that. Putting money in the bank (which due to fractional reserve accounting and the loans that banks make) help drive the economy. "Stock investment" is too narrow a term as commonly used for investment, since it doesnt take into account Sub S and partnerships, which in our economy account for more growth than publicly traded companies.

The multiplier "models" are from Obama's former advisor Cristina Romer and her husband. They are not "theories" they are based on empirical data.

I agree, investment does not NECCESSARILY result in more employment. However, lack of investment NECESSARILY means no additional employment.


Thanks for the clarification, but we disagree regarding the cart and the horse.  If consumers have money, that will drive demand and stimulate companies to produce.  If they have a market need to fill, the money will appear.  Bank loans, stock sales, venture capitalists, whatever  I do not think that investment is stimulated by excess funds as you do - I hold that it is driven by market opportunities.

quote:



As far as 3 goes, dont be ridiculous. Clinton left with a recession and drop in jobs due to the internet bubble. The start of the recession was originally pegged as March 2001 and was later recognized/revised to have started many months earlier. Unemployment until 2008 was the same or lower as under Clinton and only dropped in 2008 because of the financial crisis that GWB did his best to avoid. The deficit under Bush "ballooned" during the Democrat run House. The only large spending plan pushed by Bush besides two wars was prescription drugs, a mistake I agree, but also the only program that actually cost what it was priced at.

The Clinton economy WAS the internet bubble, the housing bubble, and ill-advised reductions in defense spending....all false prosperity that we are paying for now. Even Obama is getting some of the blame for what originated under Clintons watch.

You fail to see what you dont want to see.


I fail to see what isn't there.

Under Clinton, Rubin worked to have a sort-of balanced budget.  Bush blew past all that.  Aside from two unnecessary wars, a prescription program, he also pushed a welfare program for NOLA to counter the bad PR from botching the emergency response.  And even though you don't want to accept it, his tax cuts swelled the deficit.

The Democrat controlled House was a fiction.  Pelosi even stated once that her main goal was not to originate legislation, but to whine about Bush's programs, a policy that has carried over to the GOP as minority party.




Charles6682 -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 9:23:30 AM)

Of all the election's this past November,the one that still get's me the most is why did Flordia vote for Rick Scott as Governor?This guy is a complete fraud.I am still amazed he won.




AnimusRex -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 12:23:17 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy
Wow you are so fucking clueless its ridiculous.

I'll just deal with your first claim, that taxes are at "historic lows as a % of GDP and lower than in the 50s and 60s. Actually during the 50s and 60s Federal government receipts ranged from 14% to 19.7% of GDP with 5 years out of 20 exceeding 18% They are currently at around 18.5% thanks to the recession. Total government revenes were never above 25% in the 50s and 60s and now are hovering arouund 30%.

When you cant get your fact straight (or lie about them) its no surprise that your "opinions" come straight out of Das Kapital.


I notice you didn't cite any sources-
Here's mine:
Taxes as a percentage of GDP is currently in the middle of the graph- so although not at a historic low, it is not anywhere near the top- that is to say, our tax burden is not very high, but is perfectly normal, by historical standards.
As for income-
The tax burden- that is, the effective tax actually paid IS the lowest point since 1979-

For instance- if you look at the table I linked to, in 1979 the top 1% of earners paid 37% of their income in taxes-
today they pay 31%

All the wailing and moaning over "high taxes" is just sniveling; the average rich person today pays less in taxes than his parents did.




AnimusRex -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 12:35:17 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze

quote:

Secondly, the idea that high taxes drive away the rich is nonsense.


Really? Then why do very rich people maintain residences in low tax countries? Why do you think all sorts of tax resorts are so popular?

As to NYC, most companies need to have an office there for their image, but you see much production there?



Rich people become tax exiles, because they don't want to pay the taxes where their income is created.

No one CREATES income in Switzerland; wealth is created in America, and stored in Switzerland. Notice how rich people don't actually move their industries and operations to Switzerland, or the Cayman Islands? they locate their operations where there are pools of educated workers, where there is a good infrastructure, and so on.
If it weren't for the millions of American workers and consumers who make things and buy things, thereby creating wealth, Switzerland would be what it always was, a tiny country with a weak economy.

Likewise- the financial services industry does not keep offices in NYC "for their image"- their operations and staff, the entire production of financial services actually takes place in Manhattan.

The idea that low taxes is somehow a generator of wealth is a form of economic illiteracy- its the ultimate suckers game, a "free lunch" scheme whereby wealth is created out of thin air.

Again- wealth is created through work and consumption. We the People provide the labor, and the consumption of that labor, to create wealth. We also provide the roads, bridges, utilities and schools that make all this possible.

There is nothing wrong with people getting rich from this process- but the rich have to pay their fair share of the cost of the infrastructure that sustains and makes possible their wealth.




willbeurdaddy -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 1:02:52 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: AnimusRex


quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy
Wow you are so fucking clueless its ridiculous.

I'll just deal with your first claim, that taxes are at "historic lows as a % of GDP and lower than in the 50s and 60s. Actually during the 50s and 60s Federal government receipts ranged from 14% to 19.7% of GDP with 5 years out of 20 exceeding 18% They are currently at around 18.5% thanks to the recession. Total government revenes were never above 25% in the 50s and 60s and now are hovering arouund 30%.

When you cant get your fact straight (or lie about them) its no surprise that your "opinions" come straight out of Das Kapital.


I notice you didn't cite any sources-
Here's mine:
Taxes as a percentage of GDP is currently in the middle of the graph- so although not at a historic low, it is not anywhere near the top- that is to say, our tax burden is not very high, but is perfectly normal, by historical standards.


In other words your claim of "historic lows" is vast hyperbole. The current revenues, IN A RECESSION are higher than some and lower than some during the 50s and 60s, HUGE BOOM TIMES. Exactly what I said. surprise surprise surprise.

And your claim that the effective tax rate is at its "lowest point since 1979" shows your inability to read your own chart or to write a coherent sentence.
There were 11 years during that period that were lower than the end year in the chart of 2006.
In 2008 the percentage of taxes paid by the top 1% was up to 38% the HIGHEST rate since 1979. That is the real measure fo the tax burden.




AnimusRex -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 3:23:16 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy
In other words your claim of "historic lows" is vast hyperbole. The current revenues, IN A RECESSION are higher than some and lower than some during the 50s and 60s, HUGE BOOM TIMES. Exactly what I said. surprise surprise surprise.

And your claim that the effective tax rate is at its "lowest point since 1979" shows your inability to read your own chart or to write a coherent sentence.
There were 11 years during that period that were lower than the end year in the chart of 2006.
In 2008 the percentage of taxes paid by the top 1% was up to 38% the HIGHEST rate since 1979. That is the real measure fo the tax burden.


You are mixing apples and oranges, and making lemonade.

True, there were several years during the Clinton Administration when the rich paid more in taxes; but overall, the trend is downward- people ARE paying less today than in 1979.

And your claim of how much of the total tax revenue rich people pay is misleading- they pay the bulk of all taxes, only because they have all the money. What they pay proportionately is much less than their relative wealth.

Example- look at the figures from 2006, for the middle quintile and the top quintile- the middle pays 3% effective tax, while the rich pay 9%;

In other words, the rich pay three times the rate of tax, but have several hundred times the wealth; effectively, the richer you are, the less of a burden taxes become.





willbeurdaddy -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/26/2010 3:50:31 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: AnimusRex


quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy
In other words your claim of "historic lows" is vast hyperbole. The current revenues, IN A RECESSION are higher than some and lower than some during the 50s and 60s, HUGE BOOM TIMES. Exactly what I said. surprise surprise surprise.

And your claim that the effective tax rate is at its "lowest point since 1979" shows your inability to read your own chart or to write a coherent sentence.
There were 11 years during that period that were lower than the end year in the chart of 2006.
In 2008 the percentage of taxes paid by the top 1% was up to 38% the HIGHEST rate since 1979. That is the real measure fo the tax burden.


You are mixing apples and oranges, and making lemonade.

True, there were several years during the Clinton Administration when the rich paid more in taxes; but overall, the trend is downward- people ARE paying less today than in 1979.

And your claim of how much of the total tax revenue rich people pay is misleading- they pay the bulk of all taxes, only because they have all the money. What they pay proportionately is much less than their relative wealth.

Example- look at the figures from 2006, for the middle quintile and the top quintile- the middle pays 3% effective tax, while the rich pay 9%;

In other words, the rich pay three times the rate of tax, but have several hundred times the wealth; effectively, the richer you are, the less of a burden taxes become.




I am not mixing anything. Im taking your words and your links and showing that you lied.




tweakabelle -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/27/2010 6:04:03 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze


Have you considered that those yachts are sold in Florida and a lot of them are actually made in Florida. So by giving people tax breaks to purchase them, you are creating jobs for people working on them, then they will need maintenance, staff, all that, it creates jobs...

The company I work for is looking to open a US branch, they will go to Florida due to the tax breaks there, which means they will invest in Florida and not in another state, they'll have an office there and all that, which will be staffed by largely local people. So the tax breaks actually do create jobs. It makes so much more sense than keeping companies away with high taxes.


The economic thinking you are advocating was put into practice in Ireland. Things went well for a while, then the GFC came along and everything went pear shaped, as they tend to when such naive economics are practised.

Now Ireland is an economic basket case with approx 15% unemployment, a return of large scale emigration, a mountain of debt that will take decades to pay off, wage welfare and pension cuts, property values a fraction of what they were etc etc.

Not an example of economic policies that anyone ought to follow, or even attach any credibility to I would have thought .....




Charles6682 -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/27/2010 10:07:43 AM)

Millionaires and Billionaires really do have it good in Flordia.No state income tax.Tax breaks to buy yachts and the Federal government has been nice by giving them even more tax cuts on their Federal Income Tax.What has all this "trickle-down" economics done for Florida?Lets see,continued unemployment at around 12% for around a year now.Flordia has one of the highest foreclosure rates in the the U.S.A.Flordia's economy has suffered badly from this "Great Recession".

So,we have all these Millionaires down here,why is Flordia in such bad shape?Where are the Billionaires creating great paying jobs for Flordia?After all,with all the money they are saving not paying taxes,they should be having alot of money for jobs,right?

If anyone believes that the "trickle-down" economics theory is so great,then just take a good look at Flordia's economy.That theory dosen't work so well when it is actually put into practice.




willbeurdaddy -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/27/2010 10:30:32 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle

quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze


Have you considered that those yachts are sold in Florida and a lot of them are actually made in Florida. So by giving people tax breaks to purchase them, you are creating jobs for people working on them, then they will need maintenance, staff, all that, it creates jobs...

The company I work for is looking to open a US branch, they will go to Florida due to the tax breaks there, which means they will invest in Florida and not in another state, they'll have an office there and all that, which will be staffed by largely local people. So the tax breaks actually do create jobs. It makes so much more sense than keeping companies away with high taxes.


The economic thinking you are advocating was put into practice in Ireland. Things went well for a while, then the GFC came along and everything went pear shaped, as they tend to when such naive economics are practised.

Now Ireland is an economic basket case with approx 15% unemployment, a return of large scale emigration, a mountain of debt that will take decades to pay off, wage welfare and pension cuts, property values a fraction of what they were etc etc.

Not an example of economic policies that anyone ought to follow, or even attach any credibility to I would have thought .....


Youd have a point, if you werent totally wrong.

Ireland's financial crisis has nothing to do with tax policy and their basic economy. It is strictly a banking crisis caused by two banks that made risky property loans. Sound familiar?




tweakabelle -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/28/2010 1:06:41 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

Youd have a point, if you werent totally wrong.

Ireland's financial crisis has nothing to do with tax policy and their basic economy. It is strictly a banking crisis caused by two banks that made risky property loans. Sound familiar?


What an original analysis! Does this mark the birth of Willburnomics, a new and unique economic theory that refuses to concern itself with facts and holds that reality is whatever suits your argument?




willbeurdaddy -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/28/2010 2:38:50 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle

quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

Youd have a point, if you werent totally wrong.

Ireland's financial crisis has nothing to do with tax policy and their basic economy. It is strictly a banking crisis caused by two banks that made risky property loans. Sound familiar?


What an original analysis! Does this mark the birth of Willburnomics, a new and unique economic theory that refuses to concern itself with facts and holds that reality is whatever suits your argument?


Why dont you actually read something about Ireland's crisis instead of mimicing Tazzy's inability to post anything of substance?

You can start with Paul Krugman in the NY Times:

"First, there was irrational exuberance: in both countries buyers and lenders convinced themselves that real estate prices, although sky-high by historical standards, would continue to rise.

Second, there was a huge inflow of cheap money. In America’s case, much of the cheap money came from China; in Ireland’s case, it came mainly from the rest of the euro zone, where Germany became a gigantic capital exporter.

Third, key players had an incentive to take big risks, because it was heads they win, tails someone else loses. In Ireland this moral hazard was largely personal: “Rogue-bank heads retired with their large fortunes intact.” There was a lot of this in the United States, too: as Harvard’s Lucian Bebchuk and others have pointed out, top executives at failed U.S. financial companies received billions in “performance related” pay before their firms went belly-up.

But the most striking similarity between Ireland and America was “regulatory imprudence”: the people charged with keeping banks safe didn’t do their jobs. In Ireland, regulators looked the other way in part because the country was trying to attract foreign business, in part because of cronyism: bankers and property developers had close ties to the ruling party. "

Then you can google Anglo Irish Bank and Allied Irish Bank and read about the nearly $100 billion needed to bail them out....in an economy of less than $200 billion.

If ignorance is bliss, you must be high all the time.




mnottertail -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/28/2010 2:52:26 PM)

So among other things, no barney frank in ireland, just corporate greed.  but there is plenty of insight out there that lays alot of fiscal irresponsibility in the taxation end.


It may be, wilbur that several fucked up things here have conspired to make for a bad day...........something that may cause you untold brain pain, the fact that there is more than one fucked up aspect that emanates from one singularly bad idea. 




tweakabelle -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/28/2010 4:08:25 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy


quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

Ireland's financial crisis has nothing to do with tax policy and their basic economy. It is strictly a banking crisis caused by two banks that made risky property loans. Sound familiar?



You can start with Paul Krugman in the NY Times:

"First, there was irrational exuberance: in both countries buyers and lenders convinced themselves that real estate prices, although sky-high by historical standards, would continue to rise.

Second, there was a huge inflow of cheap money. In America’s case, much of the cheap money came from China; in Ireland’s case, it came mainly from the rest of the euro zone, where Germany became a gigantic capital exporter.

Third, key players had an incentive to take big risks, because it was heads they win, tails someone else loses. In Ireland this moral hazard was largely personal: “Rogue-bank heads retired with their large fortunes intact.” There was a lot of this in the United States, too: as Harvard’s Lucian Bebchuk and others have pointed out, top executives at failed U.S. financial companies received billions in “performance related” pay before their firms went belly-up.

But the most striking similarity between Ireland and America was “regulatory imprudence”: the people charged with keeping banks safe didn’t do their jobs. In Ireland, regulators looked the other way in part because the country was trying to attract foreign business, in part because of cronyism: bankers and property developers had close ties to the ruling party. "


If ignorance is bliss, you must be high all the time.

I rubbished your claims that the Irish crisis was "strictly a [local] banking crisis", and had nothing to do with "tax policy", which I have have kindly outlined above in bold print for you, just in case you have forgotten them.

The NY Times article you quote (presumably to support your claims) offers a number of factors as causes. These are (i) "irrational exuberance" in the real estate sector; (ii) trans-national flows of cheap money; (iii)moral hazards; and (iv) "regulatory imprudence".

As the NYT article points out, none of these factors are exclusively Irish phenomena. The USA, China, Germany and "the rest of the Euro zone" are specifically mentioned. Anything that involves the trans-national flow of cheap money cannot be said to be a "strictly" local or one country phenomenon.

Each of the factors cited by the NYT clearly involves an awful lot more than "two banks that made risky property loans". For example, real estate 'exuberance' covers buyers, sellers, investors, financiers, builders and other stakeholders in the real estate sector as well as a failure by Govt to introduce measures to discourage rampant property speculation or to successfully re-direct investment towards other sectors of the Irish economy.

Therefore the evidence you offer confirms that your original claims were simplistic rubbish. Thank you for proving my point for me. It was kind of you, though, I feel obliged to add, not a surprise to see you put your foot in it yet again.




Hillwilliam -> RE: what those billionaires are spending $$ on (12/28/2010 5:35:26 PM)

I'm still waiting for wilbur to talk about directors doing that is good for stockholders.

Where ya at chimpboy?




Page: <<   < prev  1 2 [3] 4 5   next >   >>

Valid CSS!




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy
0.0625