Wednesday, February 8, 2012

EconomicCrisis.US

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Who deserves a tax cut more: the top 2 percent — whose wages and benefits are higher than ever, and among whose ranks are the CEOs and Wall Street mavens whose antics have sliced jobs and wages and nearly destroyed the American economy — or the rest of us?

Not a bad issue for Democrats to run on this fall, or in 2012.

Republicans are hell bent on demanding an extension of the Bush tax cut for their patrons at the top, or else they’ll pull the plug on tax cuts for the middle class. This is a gift for the Democrats.
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Most of us have heard about the “Greek Crisis” and the contagion effect it has had across Europe. Many observers pin our ability to recover quickly (or simply recover) from our current to how things play out in Europe.

But how quickly we recover also depends on what the does.

The Greek Crisis and the financial crisis we are still experiencing share the same basic root: debt. Excess debt, to be precise.

If a history of financial crises teaches us anything, it is that accumulating excess debt is always risky for a society. This lesson is of little consolation to us now, of course – especially since we seem to have been asleep when it was taught. But we can pay attention to the lesson it teaches us about current policy.
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Jones warns of economic collapse

September - 10 - 2010

Rep. Walter B. Jones warned of an if the government doesn’t get a handle on its spending.

In a speech to members of the Federal Managers Association Thursday in Havelock, the third-district Republican congressman said America could not remain a strong nation if it didn’t pay its bills.

Speaking to about 150 FMA members at the Havelock Tourist and Event Center, Jones said the country just could not continue “kicking the can down the road” when it came to debt that would ultimately have to be paid by children and grandchildren.
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Orders for U.S. increased less than forecast in July, a sign that one of the few remaining bright spots in the economy is cooling.

Bookings increased 0.3 percent, compared with the 3 percent median estimate of 75 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. Excluding transportation equipment, demand unexpectedly fell.

Manufacturing is slowing after leading the U.S. out of the worst recession since the 1930s as consumers cut back on spending. The pullback in factory activity will probably contribute to in growth in the second half of the year.
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