Quote:
Originally Posted by Doove
That'll happen when you spend 10X as much on defense as the 2nd highest country.
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For the record, it's actually less than 5X what the country with the 2nd highest military budget (China) spends. Could we spend substantially less without compromising national security? I think so, and favor reductions in every area possible -- cutting politically-created and supported fat rather than muscle. But let's get real here. Defense spending is not the primary component of our debt trajectory. You could slash the military budget by 50% and we'd still have annual budget deficits of approximately $1 trillion.
Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF
The system is fucked up. It has nothing to do with either Obama or even Bush. ...you know that.The Fed Chairman runs things. You know that too.
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Actually, I think it has rather a lot to do with both Obama and Bush, both of whom have been among the most fiscally irresponsible presidents in history. (In fact, I think they are
the two most irresponsible presidents in history.) The Federal Reserve does not compel ambitious, vote-buying politicians to break the bank.
However...
The Fed certainly
enables the fiscal authorities to run large budget deficits! Without the possibility of all that money-pumping and outright debt monetization, large-scale deficit spending would come to a screeching halt.
And although Greenspan certainly accelerated the bubble-pumping in the early '00s, the problem really started with Nixon and the Burns Fed three decades earlier. Nixon, of course, closed the gold window in 1971 so that the dollar could float. In his State of the Union address that same year, he also called on congress to pass an "expansionary budget", saying that a "full employment" budget would bring about full employment in the economy. (Yes, he actually said that!) Everyone knows how well that worked.
Nixon also was reported to have told a few insiders that the job of the Fed Chairman is to do what the president tells him to do. Indeed, Arthur Burns loved to socialize at the White House and did pretty much just that.
In the 1950s and '60s, we had a Fed chairman (Bill Martin) who said that his job was to "take away the punch bowl just as the party gets going."
Back in those days, people often used the expression "as sound as a dollar."
You don't hear than one so often nowadays.