Economic Growth is the only way out of the mess we are in!


Is Income Growth for the Bottom 90% Prosperity or Inflation?

Sustainability: A Fable For Our Time


This movement has it roots back even further with Thomas Malthus and his Malthusian catastrophe and his ‎Essay on Principle of Population which have been taken up by bill Gates and others as Gates recently presented at a TED conference. Malthus and Gates are wrong Malthus for reasonable reasons and gates because it is a drive for personal power. The sustainability concept itself is unsustainable since it’s principles are at cross purposes and can lead only to global disaster.

Michael D. Shaw's avatarJunkScience.com

We must journey back to March, 1987, and the United Nations document entitled Our Common Future: Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development, to discover what is probably the only universally agreed upon—if nebulous and contradictory—definition of “sustainable development,” the precursor of “sustainability,” viz.

View original post 861 more words

The Obama Balanced Budget


This travesty will not change until the American people realize they are flat brook (they have sold their soul to the Devil for a few dollars a good joint and birth control) and then it will be way to late.

Tony Heller's avatarReal Climate Science

In 2008 Obama complained about Bush increasing the debt by $3 trillion, and promised to restore fiscal discipline.

http://moveleft.org/obamas_promises/www-barackobama-com_issues_fiscal.pdf

Instead, he tripled the deficit and has accumulated three times as much debt in six years as Bush did in eight. Obama’s smallest deficit is larger than Bush’ largest.

ScreenHunter_8291 Apr. 04 10.05

But it is worse than it seems. Obama’s original claim was also a lie – according to the White House Budget Office, Bush increased the debt by $2 trillion, not $3 trillion. Obama has increased it by $6 trillion so far.

ScreenHunter_8293 Apr. 04 10.18

Table 1.1—Summary of Receipts, Outlays, and Surpluses or Deficits (-): 1789–2020

View original post

Not a Democracy, Not A Republic, The U.S. Is An Oligarchy


Another word for this is Fascism where the means of production/technology are controlled by the government. The oligarchs may run things but the real power is in Washington and rests in the 537 people we elect and who “directly” control over 25% of the economy and indirectly probably another 50%..

Can an Economy Grow Without Inflation?


It is commonly taught that we need a stable increase in prices in order for our economy to grow.  We are told, after all, gold does not expand quick enough to accommodate rapid economic gains.  But is it possible for an economy to grow without inflation?  Not only that, can an an economy grow when prices are actually deflating?

This common inflation argument seems to ignore the greatest economic expansion in the history of the world – the industrial revolution.  During the late 1800’s the American economy was booming.  The living standard of the average man increased faster than any time frame compared to today.  While I agree that no one wants to go back and forgo all the advances that have come since, it is irresponsible to ignore the shoulders on which we now stand.

I have heard from multiple intelligent people that they just don’t believe me.  They say that our economy could not have grown quicker during the industrial revolution than any time since, and are commonly under the impression that poverty increased during the Gilded Age.  But if you are to compare apples to apples, the industrial revolution experienced more growth than any time frame.  The middle class was created during late 19th century.  In 1800 the average American was a farmer, destined to a short life of poverty.  By 1900 that had all changed.

Please refer to the graph below.  We take into account 3 different – 25 year time frames in American history: 1878 – 1903, 1946 – 1971, and 1987 – 2012.  If the time following the second world war was actually a larger expansion in the economy and living standards of citizens, you would expect a larger increase in both life expectancy and average income per person.

Economic Expansions over 25 Year Periods

According to the information found at GapMinder, it is very clear that the time preceding the Federal Reserve was actually a larger economic expansion in every measurable way (these numbers are inflation adjusted).  When you take a look at the information on that site, it is clear the average income and life expectancy is greater today than in 1903, which is why no one would want to go back to that time (straw-man argument).  The point is, if we were to see the same economic expansion during the late 20th century as we had during the late 19th century, we would all be living much longer with a much larger income per capita today.

It is also important to note that we do not feel GDP as a good indicator of economic growth, especially since it includes government spending.  But even using the government’s GDP numbers, the fact still remains.  The only thing that would change this chart is if you included World War 2, since the massive government programs exploded GDP.  But it is obvious that when food is being rationed, the living standards are not increasing for the average person.

Let us not ignore the third part of this graph, the value of the dollar.  After the Civil War ended and we no longer printed greenbacks, our country relied on a hard money standard without any central bank.  We experienced some boom and busts (though I attribute that to legalized fractional reserve theft), but by any standard they were not as long nor as severe as the recessions experienced since.

No matter the source, you will find $1 held in 1878 would buy you far more goods in 1903.  This means the value of the dollar INCREASED and we experienced a DEFLATION of prices.  This goes against all economic theory you have been likely been taught.  While our economy did not expand nearly as quickly, the two other 25 year periods experienced roughly 50% devaluation of the dollar (or 50% inflation of prices).  This is using the government’s own CPI numbers, and many would consider that we actually experienced far more price increases during the 1987 – 2012 time frame (due to the manipulation of the CPI calculation).

History is not on the side of modern day Keynesian economists.  Yes life is better now, society is more accepting of different behaviors and ethnicities, but that cannot ignore the growth we experienced and the shoulders on which we now stand.

Chinese yuan now top 5 major intl payment currency


This is not good for the United States as it will mean higher prices for imports probably later this year.

Get Ready For Negative Interest Rates In The US


The problem in the US is a smaller and smaller percentage of the citizens are working and those that aren’t are retired or on welfare. This means that there is a less and less money for goods (why was last Christmas spending less than 2013?) Unemployment is a meaningless value If there were 50,000,000 people in the country working and do one was looking for work the unemployment rate would be zero. But with 320,000,000 people in the country probably 160,000,000 should be working. If the right number of people aren’t working than the government makes up for it by printing money but that doesn’t work in the long run and thing collapse.

This Is The Beginning Of The End For The Euro


Printing money or quantitative easing, if you will, when allowed to get out of hand, which it now has, always gets very very bad.

Martin Armstrong – Sovereign Debt Collapse Coming Later In 2015


If Martin Armstrong says 2015 is the year I would not bet against him!

Adding Up the Swiss Franc Fallout


It’s looking more and more like 2015/16 will see a 2007/08 style adjustment but this time its likely to be even worse.