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#1 (permalink) |
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Old School
Join Date: Jul 2000
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7 better uses for $700 billion
If the bailout sounds like a lot of money, that's because it is. What else it could buy? How about health insurance for everyone, or fixing all the roads and bridges?
Latest Market Update September 24, 2008 -- 14:00 ET By Forbes.com Wall Street's crisis is about to become Main Street's crisis, as bank credit freezes and loans dry up. The government's fix: $700 billion to buy up the bad loans choking the system. It's a monster plan, but there's little choice, according White House and Federal Reserve officials. Though much of the money may return to the nation's coffers over time as the Treasury sells off the mortgage-backed assets it will purchase, the bailout will severely limit what the government can afford to spend on health care, energy, infrastructure and education in the years ahead. New bridges and guilt-free electricity Let's start with the nation's infrastructure. The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates our nation's bridges need $180 billion in repairs, with our rail infrastructure in need of $185 billion in maintenance. California wants to spend $40 billion for the nation's first high-speed rail network to connect Southern and Northern California. Saskia Sassen, a professor on Columbia University's Committee on Global Thought, points out that infrastructure investments would feed directly into gross domestic product, based on job and enterprise growth. And we certainly have the builders to do it. Unemployment in construction is 40% higher than in manufacturing. Arizona Public Service, an electric utility, is building the nation's largest solar power array in the desert near Gila Bend, Ariz. It will be able to power 70,000 homes using only the sun's rays -- and will create thousands of high-tech green energy jobs. Construction costs will be about $1 billion, but the utility says the 3-square-mile project will pay for itself in about seven years. With $699 billion left over, you could put even more of the Southwest's desert to work in creating clean energy. Peace of mind for the environment and our bodies Health care and climate change are other major concerns. Kenneth Thorpe, a professor of health policy at Emory University, points out that for $150 billion you could provide every American with private health insurance and create a universal automated health-information system. When you consider that the National Cancer Institute receives $5 billion a year in funding, you could multiply its budget by 10 and provide private health care to every American. McKinsey, a consulting firm, estimates it will cost the U.S. economy $150 billion a year to stabilize greenhouse gases by 2030. For three years, $700 billion could pay for the cost of both health care plans (in case one doesn't work) and cover the cost to reduce carbon emissions. Defend the borders, the economy and our academic edge Since global trade isn't going away anytime soon and America's ports are getting increasingly crowded, using the money for port expansion might be a smart idea. According to the American Association of Port Authorities, container volumes at U.S. ports have increased by 7% a year over the past 20 years, far outpacing capacity growth. National security is also a concern. After five years in Iraq, most estimates for the war's cost tally into the $500 billion range. Unlike investments in distressed assets, paying for the Iraq war won't produce a return, but $700 billion would stem the government's future debt obligations to its creditors. Then there's education. The U.S. currently spends about $500 billion annually on public education, yet still finds itself slipping behind many other industrialized nations when it comes to giving the next generation the skills it needs to compete globally. The difference, of course, is that government spending for any of this would require a massive tax increase, with no chance of getting any of the money back. The upside: At least it would be a sure bet. This article was reported and written by Matt Woolsey for Forbes.com.
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Social harmony -- the great goal of Confucianism -- thus results partly from every individual knowing his or her place in the social order and playing his or her part well. When Duke Jing of Qi asked about government, by which he meant proper administration so as to bring social harmony, Confucius replied, "There is government, when the prince is prince, and the minister is minister; when the father is father, and the son is son." (Analects XII, 11, tr. Legge). |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to K For This Useful Post: | Smaerd (09-24-2008) |
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#2 (permalink) |
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YaHookan
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I'd personally blow it on hookers and alcohol. And if you look at where all the money that should have went into those loans went...
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Disclaimer: If I act like an asshole to you. I'm sorry. It's the internet. My being an asshole on the internet allows me to be a kind human being in real life. Life is all about balance. RIP Ken "Governer" Gorman
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#3 (permalink) |
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Cardosian
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: In my fire engine
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From the point of view of a non US citizen it`s kind of handy if US taxpayers bail out the worlds economy. US citizens suffer. US plutocrats and the rest of the world laugh all the way to the bank (until this bogus bailout causes world economic meltdown).
Hmmm I`d go mental if this shit was going down in my country. Take into account that this has all been caused by the Bush administration`s deregulation of economics and the greed of the banks freed by aforesaid deregulation. And what we`re feeling in the UK is caused by us sucking up to this bollocks.
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#4 (permalink) | |
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Old School
Join Date: Jul 2000
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Quote:
Bush is afraid ,and he should be. This shit all comes down on him...."The Bush Legacy" failure of "The New World Order" whatever. Americans are a funny lot. Half blindly follow whatever the daily spin is as if it were the gospel ,confident in life liberty and their persuit of happiness ,half on the verge of saying you cannot believe/trust "anyone" ,fuck it - give me a gun. I can't believe how obvious what I just typed probably is. ![]()
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Social harmony -- the great goal of Confucianism -- thus results partly from every individual knowing his or her place in the social order and playing his or her part well. When Duke Jing of Qi asked about government, by which he meant proper administration so as to bring social harmony, Confucius replied, "There is government, when the prince is prince, and the minister is minister; when the father is father, and the son is son." (Analects XII, 11, tr. Legge). |
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