Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
casinterest wrote:The debt ceiling has to be raised to pay for what Congress already passed into law.
Why do certain politicians always try to hurt the economy by grandstanding on spending after the pigs have left the pen?
There should be no negotiation on lifting the debt ceiling. The discussions must be made when passing bills that destroy income taxes or increase spending. If the vote to increase spending passed, even under old legilstation, then that is what it is . The debt ceiling should be lifted.
After all the GOP gave Trump cart blance during his term with no issues.
Why do they care now that a democrat is in office? Is it like when they cared when Obama was in office?
https://thehill.com/homenews/administra ... t-ceiling/
bluecrew wrote:casinterest wrote:The debt ceiling has to be raised to pay for what Congress already passed into law.
Why do certain politicians always try to hurt the economy by grandstanding on spending after the pigs have left the pen?
There should be no negotiation on lifting the debt ceiling. The discussions must be made when passing bills that destroy income taxes or increase spending. If the vote to increase spending passed, even under old legilstation, then that is what it is . The debt ceiling should be lifted.
After all the GOP gave Trump cart blance during his term with no issues.
Why do they care now that a democrat is in office? Is it like when they cared when Obama was in office?
https://thehill.com/homenews/administra ... t-ceiling/
Something I agree strongly with, I heard on Chapo Trap House following the Speaker fracas:
"This isn't the Obungler administration this is the Brandon Imperium. If anyone's going to mint the [$1 trillion] coin, it's Brandon. Republicans can crow about the debt ceiling and the White House can just say 'that's cute, f*** off, we're minting the coin."
casinterest wrote:The debt ceiling has to be raised to pay for what Congress already passed into law.
Why do certain politicians always try to hurt the economy by grandstanding on spending after the pigs have left the pen?
There should be no negotiation on lifting the debt ceiling. The discussions must be made when passing bills that destroy income taxes or increase spending. If the vote to increase spending passed, even under old legilstation, then that is what it is . The debt ceiling should be lifted.
After all the GOP gave Trump cart blance during his term with no issues.
Why do they care now that a democrat is in office? Is it like when they cared when Obama was in office?
https://thehill.com/homenews/administra ... t-ceiling/
ReverseFlow wrote:Does anyone know how this is handled in other countries?
As all the ones I've lived in/aware of, this has never popped up as a talking point.
All you see are 'debt clocks'. E.g.
https://www.debt.ca/debt-clock
Or is it the case of not having a written down ceiling as the parliament has agreed to spending X so it will be paid for regardless if we increase debt?
johns624 wrote:Certain politicians need to be seen as not the ones who caused the debt, even though they all have their pet projects in their districts.
ReverseFlow wrote:Does anyone know how this is handled in other countries?
As all the ones I've lived in/aware of, this has never popped up as a talking point.
All you see are 'debt clocks'. E.g.
https://www.debt.ca/debt-clock
Or is it the case of not having a written down ceiling as the parliament has agreed to spending X so it will be paid for regardless if we increase debt?
ReverseFlow wrote:Does anyone know how this is handled in other countries?
As all the ones I've lived in/aware of, this has never popped up as a talking point.
All you see are 'debt clocks'. E.g.
https://www.debt.ca/debt-clock
Or is it the case of not having a written down ceiling as the parliament has agreed to spending X so it will be paid for regardless if we increase debt?
seb146 wrote:casinterest wrote:The debt ceiling has to be raised to pay for what Congress already passed into law.
Why do certain politicians always try to hurt the economy by grandstanding on spending after the pigs have left the pen?
There should be no negotiation on lifting the debt ceiling. The discussions must be made when passing bills that destroy income taxes or increase spending. If the vote to increase spending passed, even under old legilstation, then that is what it is . The debt ceiling should be lifted.
After all the GOP gave Trump cart blance during his term with no issues.
Why do they care now that a democrat is in office? Is it like when they cared when Obama was in office?
https://thehill.com/homenews/administra ... t-ceiling/
It's not just raising the debt ceiling but, rather, getting rid of so-called "entitlements" Republicans have wanted to get rid for decades. Republicans have wanted to give everything to the very wealthy. They *say* it is because the very wealthy will "trickle it down" to us working to prop up the morbidly wealthy. That is the excuse. But, in reality, the morbidly wealthy simply give to those who give them money.
MAGAs will crash the economy and give all the stockpile of Social Security and Medicare to the morbidly wealthy because the morbidly wealthy will give the profits back to them. Not us who paid into those two programs. You and I will never ever see a dime. All we will see is flashy and heartwarming (blech) commercials about how we MUST vote MAGA to be true patriots and be the greatest and true patriots and so on. Democrats will at least try to fund Social Security and Medicare while taking money from the morbidly wealthy, but at least they try.
If we were a truly Christian nation, as MAGAs keep saying we are, we would look more like Iceland or Germany or, at the very least, Canada.
Aaron747 wrote:Most countries just spend as if debt doesn’t matter.
QF7 wrote:Aaron747 wrote:Most countries just spend as if debt doesn’t matter.
With respect, I’m not sure that is quite true. But the U.S. is perhaps unique in that a law passed in 1917 (I think it was) placed a cap on the debt and requires an act of Congress to raise it.
However, doing so is non-optional according to the 14th Amendment.
“Section 4 Public Debt
The validity of the public debt of the United States… shall not be questioned.”
In other words, Congress, having already voted for spending, cannot then refuse to pay for it.
cairns wrote:Our country is 31 TRILLION dollars in debt. Both parties should be dragged behind a truck. Any one who tries to absolve either party is a moron.
cairns wrote:Our country is 31 TRILLION dollars in debt. Both parties should be dragged behind a truck. Any one who tries to absolve either party is a moron.
cairns wrote:Our country is 31 TRILLION dollars in debt. Both parties should be dragged behind a truck. Any one who tries to absolve either party is a moron.
QF7 wrote:Aaron747 wrote:Most countries just spend as if debt doesn’t matter.
With respect, I’m not sure that is quite true. But the U.S. is perhaps unique in that a law passed in 1917 (I think it was) placed a cap on the debt and requires an act of Congress to raise it.
However, doing so is non-optional according to the 14th Amendment.
“Section 4 Public Debt
The validity of the public debt of the United States… shall not be questioned.”
In other words, Congress, having already voted for spending, cannot then refuse to pay for it.
bluecrew wrote:cairns wrote:Our country is 31 TRILLION dollars in debt. Both parties should be dragged behind a truck. Any one who tries to absolve either party is a moron.
What do you understand of the debt ceiling? Do you know how modern capitalist economies structure debt?
Noted liberal Dick Cheney quipped "deficits don't matter" in 2004, and you know, depending on the size of the economy and the size of the deficit, he's totally right. Provided the government is responsibly structuring and securitizing debt, and the growth of the debt does not outstrip the growth of the economy, the economy is healthy. A government operating under modern monetary policy with a capitalist economy is absolutely expected to run a deficit because in those conditions, a government surplus is almost always linked with an economic recession.
Simply, the government puts so much money into the economy today, that when you slow that down, you slow the whole economy down too. When you're the reserve currency for almost every bank in the world, the concept of a default is inconceivable, so essentially the borrowing limit is unlimited, and countries will always give us a favorable borrowing rate. The US government always pays their debts.
Economy's been running fine like this for over a century.
Aesma wrote:As I said what's needed is a golden rule not a debt ceiling. It would be impossible to pass a gigantic tax cut in these circumstances if you don't cut a lot of spending to account for it.
seb146 wrote:Aesma wrote:As I said what's needed is a golden rule not a debt ceiling. It would be impossible to pass a gigantic tax cut in these circumstances if you don't cut a lot of spending to account for it.
Simply cutting spending will do zero to the debt. We need income. Taxes. But, for some reason, when taxation comes up, Republicans think we don't need taxes but we can just spend, spend, spend especially for the military. THAT is where cuts need to start. Cutting 500 low level IRS employees will not do a thing.
Aesma wrote:Then why didn't the GOP balance the budget when it controlled all branches of government ? And did instead the exact opposite, make a bigger hole ?
LCDFlight wrote:Aesma wrote:Then why didn't the GOP balance the budget when it controlled all branches of government ? And did instead the exact opposite, make a bigger hole ?
You're right... Bush II spent a lot of money on wars, and Trump spent a lot of money on COVID, which Biden continued and accelerated.
All 4 of the presidents in the 21st century spent a lot of money. It has added up. We need to stop the trend.
I think people often bring up Trump's tax cuts, but revenue nevertheless increased to record levels in 2019. I don't think it was true that the Trump tax cuts cost money. I think they added more money to the treasury, spurred hiring and were excellent policy.
leader1 wrote:LCDFlight wrote:Aesma wrote:Then why didn't the GOP balance the budget when it controlled all branches of government ? And did instead the exact opposite, make a bigger hole ?
You're right... Bush II spent a lot of money on wars, and Trump spent a lot of money on COVID, which Biden continued and accelerated.
All 4 of the presidents in the 21st century spent a lot of money. It has added up. We need to stop the trend.
I think people often bring up Trump's tax cuts, but revenue nevertheless increased to record levels in 2019. I don't think it was true that the Trump tax cuts cost money. I think they added more money to the treasury, spurred hiring and were excellent policy.
Just curious, but what revenue went up after the Trump tax cuts? Federal revenue was noticeably down in 2019, right after they came into play.
https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/america ... t-revenue/
I never understood why those calling for spending cuts are now sounding the alarm with a Democrat currently in charge. We didn’t hear a peep from these so-called fiscal conservatives during the Trump and Bush years. Really hard to take their “concerns” seriously when they could have done the required changes/cuts themselves when they had the power. Their hypocrisy is astounding.
LCDFlight wrote:leader1 wrote:LCDFlight wrote:
You're right... Bush II spent a lot of money on wars, and Trump spent a lot of money on COVID, which Biden continued and accelerated.
All 4 of the presidents in the 21st century spent a lot of money. It has added up. We need to stop the trend.
I think people often bring up Trump's tax cuts, but revenue nevertheless increased to record levels in 2019. I don't think it was true that the Trump tax cuts cost money. I think they added more money to the treasury, spurred hiring and were excellent policy.
Just curious, but what revenue went up after the Trump tax cuts? Federal revenue was noticeably down in 2019, right after they came into play.
https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/america ... t-revenue/
I never understood why those calling for spending cuts are now sounding the alarm with a Democrat currently in charge. We didn’t hear a peep from these so-called fiscal conservatives during the Trump and Bush years. Really hard to take their “concerns” seriously when they could have done the required changes/cuts themselves when they had the power. Their hypocrisy is astounding.
“ In 2019, the government’s revenues amounted to $3.5 trillion—$133 billion (or 4 percent) more than in 2018.”
https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2019-1 ... R-FY19.pdf
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Look at the tax trends after 2020, when revenue really took off after all the tax changes worked thru the economy. It’s not just one year.
The true “tax” burden government imposes is the spending, not taxes. We need spendingbto decline as a percentage of GDP.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Look at the tax trends after 2020, when revenue really took off after all the tax changes worked thru the economy. It’s not just one year.
The true “tax” burden government imposes is the spending, not taxes. We need spendingbto decline as a percentage of GDP.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:seb146 wrote:Aesma wrote:As I said what's needed is a golden rule not a debt ceiling. It would be impossible to pass a gigantic tax cut in these circumstances if you don't cut a lot of spending to account for it.
Simply cutting spending will do zero to the debt. We need income. Taxes. But, for some reason, when taxation comes up, Republicans think we don't need taxes but we can just spend, spend, spend especially for the military. THAT is where cuts need to start. Cutting 500 low level IRS employees will not do a thing.
You could eliminate the DOD and not come close to closing the deficit. Are you for UK style taxes, to pick one, 40% on income starting at $55,000 and 20% VAT?
seb146 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:seb146 wrote:
Simply cutting spending will do zero to the debt. We need income. Taxes. But, for some reason, when taxation comes up, Republicans think we don't need taxes but we can just spend, spend, spend especially for the military. THAT is where cuts need to start. Cutting 500 low level IRS employees will not do a thing.
You could eliminate the DOD and not come close to closing the deficit. Are you for UK style taxes, to pick one, 40% on income starting at $55,000 and 20% VAT?
But British taxes are also paying for a strong public education and a strong public health care system. Republicans simply want the morbidly wealthy to not pay taxes while paying for things like border walls that fail after six months and wars no one wants to fight. So, give us a respectable public education system and an actual working health care system that works for We The People and not insurance companies, then we can talk.
seb146 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:seb146 wrote:
Simply cutting spending will do zero to the debt. We need income. Taxes. But, for some reason, when taxation comes up, Republicans think we don't need taxes but we can just spend, spend, spend especially for the military. THAT is where cuts need to start. Cutting 500 low level IRS employees will not do a thing.
You could eliminate the DOD and not come close to closing the deficit. Are you for UK style taxes, to pick one, 40% on income starting at $55,000 and 20% VAT?
But British taxes are also paying for a strong public education and a strong public health care system. Republicans simply want the morbidly wealthy to not pay taxes while paying for things like border walls that fail after six months and wars no one wants to fight. So, give us a respectable public education system and an actual working health care system that works for We The People and not insurance companies, then we can talk.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:seb146 wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:
You could eliminate the DOD and not come close to closing the deficit. Are you for UK style taxes, to pick one, 40% on income starting at $55,000 and 20% VAT?
But British taxes are also paying for a strong public education and a strong public health care system. Republicans simply want the morbidly wealthy to not pay taxes while paying for things like border walls that fail after six months and wars no one wants to fight. So, give us a respectable public education system and an actual working health care system that works for We The People and not insurance companies, then we can talk.
You need to speak to some Brits about their education and NHS, not so strong. Just try campaigning in the US for those tax rates.
Here’s a Twitter thread on the problem
https://twitter.com/brian_riedl/status/ ... YzZvqeeJ7g
casinterest wrote:After all the GOP gave Trump cart blance during his term with no issues.
Why do they care now that a democrat is in office? Is it like when they cared when Obama was in office?
einsteinboricua wrote:The debt ceiling is a tool Congress came up with because it creates a problem that Congress can blame on the president, who needs the solution that only Congress can provide. Congress gets to beat the president and then be seen as the savior, all while extracting concessions. The interesting thing is that anyone who truly understands the system will know that when Congress passes a budget, they're mandating the president to spend it as written. In other words, it's like me budgeting for a project but purposely falling short, handing it off to a project manager, and then blaming the PM when they report that we're short and have to "borrow" to finish the project.
I wonder if a debt ceiling may be ruled unconstitutional given the constitutional clause of public debt. Given that the debt ceiling is a law that would infringe on that clause, a debt ceiling would therefore be unconstitutional.casinterest wrote:After all the GOP gave Trump cart blance during his term with no issues.
Why do they care now that a democrat is in office? Is it like when they cared when Obama was in office?
Because that's their crisis du jour. And I truly wonder if voters in 2022 woke up to that reality of understanding the double face approach that Republicans take when it comes to government spending: increasing spending on defense, proposing cuts to entitlements and welfare, AND cutting taxes to boot without a care about the deficit until a Democrat is in office. They overplayed their hand in 2017 and 2018 which allowed Dems to take the House (two years of unified GOP rule pre-Covid didn't bring down spending; at least Dems spend thinking of how everyone benefits and not just the richest tier).
bluecrew wrote:
Obviously we'll cut all the foreign aid, sorry Haiti, but that's only going to net $6.4b/yr.
Let's go to food stamps and farm subsidies next. Can all of them, farms will fail, people will go hungry and possibly die, and we'll potentially cause a little international agricultural crisis as we clean out the "dead wood" of farms that can't compete without subsidy, but we'll save a whopping $28.8b. If you cut all benefits, like WIC and child nutrition programs in schools, you can save another $10b.
Kiwirob wrote:bluecrew wrote:
Obviously we'll cut all the foreign aid, sorry Haiti, but that's only going to net $6.4b/yr.
Let's go to food stamps and farm subsidies next. Can all of them, farms will fail, people will go hungry and possibly die, and we'll potentially cause a little international agricultural crisis as we clean out the "dead wood" of farms that can't compete without subsidy, but we'll save a whopping $28.8b. If you cut all benefits, like WIC and child nutrition programs in schools, you can save another $10b.
That's being a bit dramatic, NZ hasn't had farm subsidies since 1984, some farms failed, other farmers saw an opportunity to increase there land holdings, smaller farms that needed subsidies turned into larger farms that didn't, nobody died as far as I know and we certainly didn't go hungry.
QF7 wrote:If Republicans are stupid enough to actually eliminate Social Security and Medicare, all the Dems will have to do is run one TV spot showing grandma reduced to eating dog food and Florida will instantly become the bluest state in the country.
All Republicans with at least two working brain cells know this.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:
You need to speak to some Brits about their education and NHS, not so strong. Just try campaigning in the US for those tax rates.
Here’s a Twitter thread on the problem
https://twitter.com/brian_riedl/status/ ... YzZvqeeJ7g
bluecrew wrote:Kiwirob wrote:bluecrew wrote:
Obviously we'll cut all the foreign aid, sorry Haiti, but that's only going to net $6.4b/yr.
Let's go to food stamps and farm subsidies next. Can all of them, farms will fail, people will go hungry and possibly die, and we'll potentially cause a little international agricultural crisis as we clean out the "dead wood" of farms that can't compete without subsidy, but we'll save a whopping $28.8b. If you cut all benefits, like WIC and child nutrition programs in schools, you can save another $10b.
That's being a bit dramatic, NZ hasn't had farm subsidies since 1984, some farms failed, other farmers saw an opportunity to increase there land holdings, smaller farms that needed subsidies turned into larger farms that didn't, nobody died as far as I know and we certainly didn't go hungry.
I can guarantee you that you've consumed something in the last 24 hours that was made with US grain, soybeans, etc.
The US agricultural market is incredibly prolific, uncertainty in that sector will cause massive disruption purely because of the size of the market.
I don't largely support farm subsidies, and haven't since the biofuels subsidies turned out to be a kickback to already wealthy mass-scale corn farmers. There are very valid reasons to support subsidies though, there needs to be a way for the government to nudge agricultural production in a direction, and the numbers aren't even right - farm subsidy budget figures include disaster relief awarded by the government, as well as certain programs to maintain common agricultural areas, like oyster beds.
A disruption in agricultural subsidies would absolutely have a catastrophic inflationary impact on the US economy that would kick it into a recession. Even if it's temporary and buffs out over 5 years, that's the kicker. It certainly won't make the economy go *up.*
Reinhardt wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:
You need to speak to some Brits about their education and NHS, not so strong. Just try campaigning in the US for those tax rates.
Here’s a Twitter thread on the problem
https://twitter.com/brian_riedl/status/ ... YzZvqeeJ7g
Please don't conflate the current state of the NHS or Education caused by the government of the last 13 years (Tories i.e right wing) over what it was when it was properly funded and managed in the years prior to that. NHS outcomes, average cost per head, wait times etc were all exceptionally good and all of the population have access. If you want private, pay more and go private, nobody stops you.
It's what happens when you have a populist, incompetent government in control and should serve as another warning to the world (as if it needs one, but apparently it does) as to what happens in those circumstances.
Back to the topic at hand, do you not have a serve problem with tax evasion in the US? Wasn't that the whole point of giving the IRS more manpower?
GalaxyFlyer wrote:bluecrew wrote:Kiwirob wrote:
That's being a bit dramatic, NZ hasn't had farm subsidies since 1984, some farms failed, other farmers saw an opportunity to increase there land holdings, smaller farms that needed subsidies turned into larger farms that didn't, nobody died as far as I know and we certainly didn't go hungry.
I can guarantee you that you've consumed something in the last 24 hours that was made with US grain, soybeans, etc.
The US agricultural market is incredibly prolific, uncertainty in that sector will cause massive disruption purely because of the size of the market.
I don't largely support farm subsidies, and haven't since the biofuels subsidies turned out to be a kickback to already wealthy mass-scale corn farmers. There are very valid reasons to support subsidies though, there needs to be a way for the government to nudge agricultural production in a direction, and the numbers aren't even right - farm subsidy budget figures include disaster relief awarded by the government, as well as certain programs to maintain common agricultural areas, like oyster beds.
A disruption in agricultural subsidies would absolutely have a catastrophic inflationary impact on the US economy that would kick it into a recession. Even if it's temporary and buffs out over 5 years, that's the kicker. It certainly won't make the economy go *up.*
If the government gives X dollars in subsidies to farmers, very specific subset at that, how is that less inflationary than the public spending those X dollars in food prices. Inflation isn’t rising prices in specific markets, it’s a general increase in the price level. Without more printed money, the rise in food price would be offset by lower prices due to reduced demand in other markets or by consumers buying substitute cheaper goods.
Aesma wrote:I think farm subsidies are a necessary evil that all countries should be taking part in. Ensuring the population is fed is the most basic government role. And importing food isn't a good solution, it should only be for pleasure (exotic fruits) not the staples.
With that said, I can't understand how subsidies in the US aren't linked to a minimum of environmental rules, farmers can pollute, destroy land, use water until it's depleted, it's crazy.