OBAMA IS FREAKING KENYAN SCAREMONGER.. SEQUESTRATION WILL NOT LAY OFF FIRST RESPONDERS AND TEACHERS AND AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS.
UNFUCKING BELIEVABLE BULLSHIT FROM THE KENYAN... ALL THE DOOM AND GLOOM IS BULLSHIT PATRIOTS...
Fact: The sequester cuts domestic spending by only 2.5 cents on the dollar.
AS KRAUTHAMMER SIAD... This is the ridiculously hyped armageddon since the Mayan
calendar. In fact, it looks worse than the Mayan disaster. Look, this,
as you say, can be solved in a day, in an hour by allowing a transfer of
funds. It’s incredibly soluble, easily soluble. And the president is
the one who ought to propose it. He won’t, of course, because he is
looking for a fight and not a solution. But secondly, look at this in
perspective.
In terms of the gross domestic product of our
economy this is .03, it’s a third of 1% of our domestic economy. On the
domestic side, overall, it’s 2.5 cents on the dollar. And overall, on
the non-defense side, it’s a penny-and-a-half on the dollar of
reductions. Here we are with a debt of $16 trillion and the argument
today is if we cut a penny-and-a-half on non-defense spending in one
year it’s the end of the world. If so, we are hopelessly in debt and
we’re going to end up like Greece.
As I say....OBAMA had all those first
responder standing behind as useful idiot no brainer "props"!! Does any
of those fucking assholes in their pressed uniforms that the state and
local budgets pay for FIRST RESPONDERS ?? The Federal Budget
Sequestration has nothing to do with their budget cuts. OK ????????????
FREAKING USELESS STUPID SHITS... Posing behind the NEGRO as props...!
HEY ASSHOLES ON THE LEFT..
Firefighters are not paid with Federal Dollars
School Teachers are not Paid with Federal Dollars
Police are not paid with federal Dollars
Firefighters are not paid with Federal Dollars
Just fat cat WASHINGTON BUREAUCRATS ARE !! LIKE THE TSA AND THE OTHER
SHITS AT ALL THE OTHER FEDERAL AGENCIES WILL NOT GET A RAISE.... AND
THAT IS GOOD !!
BESIDES 2013 Cuts Are $44 Billion, Not $85 Billion in CUTS ON A 3.8 TRILLION BUDGET FROM WHICH WE ARE ALREADY BORROWING 46 Cents of every dollar to prop up the OBAMA/US HOUSE OF CARDS
You got that? When President Obama scaremongers about national parks closing and TSA lines getting longer - and when Republicans bitch and moan about the military having to set up bake sales to buy bombers - they are already misstating basic facts. The sequester will slice $44 billion off this year's budget, not $85 billion.
CBO figures that total spending in FY2013 will come to around $3.55 trillion (see table 1-1), or roughly the same as FY2012, when it came to $3.53 trillion. In 2014, assuming the sequester happens, CBO figures total spending will be $3.6 trillion before it jacks up considerably to $3.8 trillion in 2015 and then up to over $4 trillion in 2016. As Taylor's chart (above, right) shows, this isn't that very much different at all than what would happen absent sequestration. Taylor favors keeping the sequester but add the sensible proviso that the president and the Congress should allow all affected agencies to the flexibility "to adjust their budgets within the overall sequester totals." That blunts the criticism that the sequestration is itself too blunt an instrument.
You'll note in Taylor's chart a line marked "pro-growth reform," which is substantially lower than the the CBO baseline or spending "without sequester." Taylor explains that's the amount of spending that would happen if the government pursuied a "fiscal consolidation strategy" that reduced the debt-to-GDP ratio in a way that would return spending as a share of the economy to pre-crisis levels. In work done with John Cogan, Volker Wieland, Tobias Cwik, Taylor simulates the effects of cutting spending on the larger economy and finds that
The positive short run economic effects occur even in the model with price and wage rigidities for several reasons including that the lower spending (as a share of GDP) can reduce expected tax rates and raise permanent after-tax income compared to what would be expected under current policy. This stimulates consumption. The gradual nature of the government spending reduction, which allows time for private spending to adjust, avoids the negative aggregate demand effects that traditional Keynesian models emphasize.
How does cutting government spending spur consumption and growth? After all, if we count most government spending in GDP, significant cuts to government spending will by definition shrink the economy, right? Taylor notes the incremental but believable cuts in spending signal to businesses and consumers that massive tax hikes or truly disruptive reductions in spending are less likely to happen. As a result, economic activity proceeds. An added bonus is that misallocated resources - more likely via government spending than by private actors - get freed up as well.
That gap on the right-hand side of the chart (Figure 1, above right) between "Baseline" and "Fiscal Consolidation Strategy" is essentially another way of marking the huge price exacted on future economic growth by high levels of government spending and debt. As Veronique de Rugy and I have noted in various articles (like this one and this one), research by Carmen Reinhart, Vincent Reinhart, and Kenneth Rogoff argues that maintaining levels of gross debt greater than 90 percent of GDP for five years at a time reduces future economic growth by as much as 1 percentage point a year for 20-plus years. We've been in such a "debt overhang" situation since 2008 and the cumulative effect over the coming years will likely be substantial. In the chart to the right, the blue line represents expected economic growth when gross debt is lower than 90 percent of GDP and the red line shows reduced growth due to debt overhang.
Who exactly is up for having 24 percent less stuff in, say, 2036? Start building it into your retirement plans, because that's where we're heading if spending and debt patterns keep going the way they're headed. As the CBO illustrates it, there's really no scenario under current trends in which revenue catches up to spending.