Saturday Linkage
Team Obama floated its first trial balloon on how to pay for Education Jobs without touching Arne’s precious Race to the Top funding… Take the money from food stamps! That 55% of Americans believe Obama to be a socialist speaks volumes about how far down the rabbit hole we’ve gone…
We were told we have to offset every damn dime of [new teacher spending]. Well, it ain’t easy to find offsets, and with all due respect to the administration their first suggestion for offsets was to cut food stamps. Now they were careful not to make an official budget request, because they didn’t want to take the political heat for it, but that was the first trial balloon they sent down here. … Their line of argument was, well, the cost of food relative to what we thought it would be has come down, so people on food stamps are getting a pretty good deal in comparison to what we thought they were going to get. Well isn’t that nice. Some poor bastard is going to get a break for a change.
Invictus de-constructs the right-wing narrative that increases in the minimum wage have led to higher teen un-employment…
U.S. employees old enough to retire are outnumbering their teenage counterparts for the first time since at least 1948 when Harry Truman was president, a sign of how generations are now having to compete for jobs.
The AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE [of all places] is warning us of the dangers of Deflation! Someone had better warn John Makin that this doesn’t fit the narrative…
The link between volatile financial conditions and the real economy has been powerfully underscored by the events since mid-2007. Growth has suffered and subsequently recovered given powerful monetary and fiscal stimulus. And yet, the damaged financial sector, unable to supply credit; a jump in the precautionary demand for cash; and a persistent overhang of global production capacity have combined to leave deflation pressure intact. The G20’s newfound embrace of fiscal stringency only adds to the extant deflation pressure.
Speaking of which, Christopher Hayes details the political hysterics building over deficits…
We are poised on the same tipping point with regard to the debt. Amid official unemployment of 9.5 percent and a global contraction, we shouldn’t even be talking about deficits in the short run. Yet these days, entrance into the club of the “serious” requires not a plan for reducing unemployment but a plan to do battle with the invisible and as yet unmaterialized international bond traders preparing an attack on the dollar.
Robert Reich lays out the core issue facing the U.S. that remains beyond the realm of thinkable… Polarization!
We’re back to the same ominous trend as before the Great Recession: a larger and larger share of total income going to the very top while the vast middle class continues to lose ground.
And as long as this trend continues, we can’t get out of the shadow of the Great Recession. When most of the gains from economic growth go to a small sliver of Americans at the top, the rest don’t have enough purchasing power to buy what the economy is capable of producing…
The crash of 2008 didn’t turn into another Great Depression because the government learned the importance of flooding the market with cash, thereby temporarily rescuing some stranded consumers and most big bankers. But the financial rescue didn’t change the economy’s underlying structure — median wages dropping while those at the top are raking in the lion’s share of income.
That’s why America’s middle class still doesn’t have the purchasing power it needs to reboot the economy, and why the so-called recovery will be so tepid—maybe even leading to a double dip. It’s also why America will be vulnerable to even larger speculative booms and deeper busts in the years to come.
And, finally, the faux deficit hawks in both parties are hell bent on making the middle and working classes pay through the nose for an economic collapse engineered by their corporate masters. Yet, their concern for deficit spending disappears when it comes to protecting tax breaks for the children of the super-wealthy. Hey, what’s a half-trillion dollars among friends?
Posted: July 17th, 2010 under Politics, The Dismal Science.
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