Visit greenpagan's column >>

GREENPAGANHome Page

libertarian-socialist wino
Add To Watchlist
Articles Posted: 152; Links Seeded: 7927
Member Since: 3/2007Last Seen: 11/25/2009

Squeezing the Most From a Stimulus Plan

advertisement

The size of a possible stimulus plan rises as the economy contracts, and that is happening at a 4 percent annual rate, according to current estimates, or eight times as fast as it was this summer. Just offsetting that contraction requires a federal infusion of at least $400 billion, many economists calculate. And even that would not restore a healthy economy.

"The hope is that the next stimulus package will be large enough to move the economy from big negatives to zero growth," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. "That is the benchmark today: zero growth."

***

The stimulus package, in contrast, puts up government money as a substitute for the spending and investment that is no longer taking place in the private sector — despite low interest rates — so that the economy can grow again, or at least stop shrinking.

That makes the stimulus package ever more important if the economy continues to deteriorate at its present pace. Not since the first quarter of 1982, in the midst of a severe recession, has the gross domestic product contracted at a 4 percent annual rate in a single three-month period, as a growing number of forecasters say it is now doing, according to Blue Chip Economic Indicators.

In America's $14.4 trillion economy, that means the output of goods and services has been declining by nearly $50 billion a month since September — a decline the government will find itself under ever more pressure to reverse if demand in the private sector does not revive.

What's this?
Who's leading the conversation?
This visualization below allows you to see the impact that each user has on the current conversation. The top row contains the group of users who have had the most impact, the 2nd row the group of users who have had the 2nd most impact (et cetera). Users with similar impact are grouped together, and the average score of the group is shown to the left of the group. The author of the article is also shown on the left, in their corresponding group. Each user's score is based on the number of comments the user has made plus the number of votes their comments have received. The scores are calculated relative one another, so while their absolute value is not particularly important, their relative difference does indicate a larger difference in impact on the conversation.
1.5
{"commentId":4245819,"authorDomain":"greenpagan"}

The choice: Evolution towards a highly adaptable capitalism with economic democracy for all workers; or, a rapid transition to outright democratic socialism (which is the ultimate destination anyway, as I see it). Otherwise it's total political-economic collapse and social upheavals. The markets will not self-correct. Sorry. It's time for such blind faith to shed its tail.

====

{"commentId":4245819,"threadId":"431574","contentId":"2164962","authorDomain":"greenpagan"}
  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Mon Dec 1, 2008 11:18 AM EST
{"canLink":false,"threadId":"431574","isPrivate":false}
Leave a Comment:
You're in Easy Mode. If you prefer, you can use XHTML Mode instead.
As a new user, you may notice a few temporary content restrictions. Click here for more info.
{"threadId":"431574","contentId":"2164962"}
Start TrackingStart Tracking
Stop TrackingStop Tracking