Republicans and Democrats ...
Mod Note:
Republicans and Democrats are not really a fitting topic of discussion on a site with a No Politics rule like this one has.
So, please, find something else to talk about.
Republicans and Democrats ...
Which, (IMHO), is terrible for the person in debt. They are just being offered a deeper hole to step into, and are being handed the shovel to dig it.
The loan holders, if they were truly sharing the pain, would offer at least some non-trivial relief.
Be Safe, Be Well,
Tom Bitonti
I stand by what I said- only helping the wealthy is NOT a recipe for rapid economic recovery.That all depends on what the goal is.
If the goal is to help the majority of people then no it's not working well.
If the goal is to help the wealthy then it is working as planned.
Sorry, I'll not continue talking about that.Mod Note:
Republicans and Democrats are not really a fitting topic of discussion on a site with a No Politics rule like this one has.
So, please, find something else to talk about.
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Germany, Europe's Largest Economy, Enters Recession Due To Coronavirus
Germany has seen its biggest quarterly contraction since 2009 when the global financial crisis ravaged the country's economy. Economists expect an even deeper slump in the second quarter.www.npr.org
So, no, not "just fine". Better than we are? Probably.
Here's the thing, again - EN World has a No Politics rule. So, discussion of exactly why we do what we do can only go so far. You want to discuss it further than that, you'll have to do so on another site. I'm sorry.
Which is why I specified Arthur Laffer’s version, which is predicated on tax cuts for businesses and wealthy. Tax cuts, of course, being inherently without control & oversight. But Laffer’s theory can work ONLY when taxation is so high that it is on the right side of the bell curve. (Notably, no research has EVER been done on the actual shape of Laffer’s curve, so nobody has any idea if it’s even symmetrical.)Note that the European way of handling has been sort of supply side - pay the employers to keep employees on the payroll. The trick is to control how that money is used, rather than to hand a company cash to use as the stockholders and executives want.
It’s also a bad thing for certain individual workers. Like someone who is in the later stages of their working life and would find retraining for a new job difficult or impossible. Especially if they’re not in a good position to retire.The wealthy losing money isn't something I care about.
This is like the paradoxical notion that automation eliminating jobs is a bad thing.
It's only a bad thing because the owners are able to profit more off of it. If we instead used the additional labour provided by the automatons for the benefit of the people it wouldn't be a problem.
Unfortunately, most of America seems to disagree with you.The wealthy losing money isn't something I care about.
It’s also a bad thing for certain individual workers. Like someone who is in the later stages of their working life and would find retraining for a new job difficult or impossible. Especially if they’re not in a good position to retire.
It could also be disastrous in areas where the local economy is not diversified.
I have a student loan. I got a letter in the mail telling me my payments and interest had been stopped (both) until October so I did not have to pay. When I went to the lender's website to check on making a payment anyways - I am converted to work-from-home - it wanted to argue me out of doing so. As if the lender figured out that payments made during the no-interest period would mean a smaller principal balance later and therefore less interest income to them in the future, plus I would finish paying it all off sooner.Which, (IMHO), is terrible for the person in debt. They are just being offered a deeper hole to step into, and are being handed the shovel to dig it.
The loan holders, if they were truly sharing the pain, would offer at least some non-trivial relief.
Be Safe, Be Well,
Tom Bitonti