December 8, 2010
Do tax cuts for the wealthy stimulate the economy?

Initial estimates by economists suggested that the overall legislation would reduce the unemployment rate by one-half a percentage point to a full point over the next year, compared with allowing all the tax cuts to expire and passing no new stimulus. By the end of 2012, the decline could be up to 1.5 percentage points, economists said.

Since economists are not always right and they have been wrong so often recently, I am not sure at all if the giveaway to the rich will do anything more than add to the deficit.

While I am no millionaire, with all the uncertainty in the economy, I plan to make no change in my spending during the next year.  Whatever additional money that I have coming in from payroll tax holiday, I simply plan to save and/or invest, and like any other investor, the money might as well end up in foreign stocks.

(Source: The New York Times)

December 7, 2010
President Obama you disappointed me

“I know there’s some people in my own party and in the other party who would rather prolong this battle, even if we can’t reach a compromise,” Mr. Obama said in announcing the bipartisan agreement on tax cuts and unemployment benefits. “But I’m not willing to let working families across this country become collateral damage for political warfare here in Washington.”

I can understand the logic about helping the middle class and extending the unemployment benefits, but the deal basically is designed to keep politicians of both parties in office because eventually it is the rich who write the big checks for campaigns.

Is there anyone watching out for America and Americans?  The deficit reduction talk is just talk and all these clowns care about is reelection.  I am disgusted.

(Source: The New York Times)