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#1 |
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Arlington, VA
Posts: 27,717
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This is in percent of GDP, not in real dollars, but it's something.
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#2 | |
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Makes some feel uncomfortable
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 10,346
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Quote:
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"I'm certainly free, nay compelled, to spread the gospel of Spex. " - xoxoxoBruce
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#3 | |
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™
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Arlington, VA
Posts: 27,717
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Yeah, well, the debt graph is boring. It just keeps going up exponentially. The deficit graph is where the real data is, because you can see how government policy and economic factors work together to increase the debt slightly or rapidly.
One interesting thing is that the debt was much worse in the 80s because interest rates were higher then, so a bigger slice of the federal budget pie had to be spent paying interest back then than it does now. So we have a much bigger debt now, but it doesn't matter as much as it did during the Reagan years. Quote:
edit: Actually, I misspoke. That's the interest the federal government has to pay, expressed as a percentage of GDP. |
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#4 |
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still says videotape
Join Date: Feb 2001
Posts: 26,813
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I like that graph. It really cuts to the bones of the spending vs revenue problem. It shows that we maybe were dead wrong in the eighties and should check out some pie charts from that time vs now for comparison. Big defense is big government...
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If you would only recognize that life is hard, things would be so much easier for you. - Louis D. Brandeis |
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#5 | |
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Person who doesn't update the user title
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Bottom lands of the Missoula floods
Posts: 6,402
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Amen Griff.
To hear today's GOP, Reagan was the master of an astute economic theory. Wiki: Quote:
We are still living with his "star wars" (Strategic Defense Initiative), and to some extent his 600-ship Navy, with their resulting and ever-increasing (supply-side) deficits -> debt. |
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#6 |
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™
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Arlington, VA
Posts: 27,717
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My only gripe about it is that I don't have a good understanding of what percent of GDP really means. I would more easily understand percent of annual budget, or dollars adjusted for inflation. I'm not sure percent of GDP is a good measure.
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#7 |
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Person who doesn't update the user title
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Bottom lands of the Missoula floods
Posts: 6,402
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Glatt, "deficit" is for a particular period of time, whereas "debt" is the cumulated deficits
So I look on GDP as the total output of energy and resources ($) of the country. So, looking at a given year's deficit as a %GDP is a measure of what the country would have to expend to reduce that deficit (to zero). OTOH, higher inflation has the effect in future years of reducing the subsequent debt-to-%GDP ratios ... i.e., older debts can be paid off with "cheaper" dollars BUT, I'm open to being educated out of the error of my ways. . |
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#8 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Arlington, VA
Posts: 27,717
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Quote:
But I'm no economist. |
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#9 | |
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Read? I only know how to write.
Join Date: Jan 2001
Posts: 11,933
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Quote:
It did not matter to him because he prospered by spending money then. We are now stuck with the resulting bills. Notice what happened when Reagan/Bush ran the debt up big time. In the Cellar, so many in 1990/2 were complaining about how bad things had become. Then Clinton addressed the problem. As a result, the economy prospered and deficit dropped to zero. What did Clinton do? He raised taxes. That (in part) caused the economy to prosper. Extremist do not want to admit something. Obama is successfully curing the destruction of the American economy created (in part) by tax cuts, welfare to the rich, and other fiscal mismanagement - including Mission Accomplished. Last edited by tw; 10-11-2013 at 10:05 AM. |
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