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Stephen Metzger » Comments » C

  • Savings Rates and Long Term Economic Health [View article]
    Excellent article. One the few I have seen that links the automatic stabilizers to DPI, thus by implication, to the income impact of unemployment. The breakdown of salaries and wages by industry is also lends insight into where we are in the economy at this point.
    Nov 04 07:46 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • The Economic Impact of the G20 Ending Oil Subsidies  [View article]
    This is a one-sided and very disappointing article. Hidden energy subsidies? Could you be more explicit and name them, please? $1 trillion in costs annually associated with fossil fuels? That I find very hard to believe and certainly does not pertain the United States. Green energy jobs? Non-existent without subsidies!! Mr. Rickman has, seemingly, taken the current administration's energy policy and simply regurgitated it. Energy independence? When you close off offshore drilling and ANWR, how can you seriously be interested in energy independence? Skating on the thin ice of subsidized greenery is not only precarious but downright dangerous. There is only one rational objective in this travesty and that is to bring down America. All aspects of this pathetic and dangerous administration point to this purpose.
    Sep 17 08:52 am |Rating: +10 -8 |Link to Comment
  • TALF Is Starting to Make Me Mad  [View article]
    Perhaps I am missing something, but Mr. Cohan appears to shift gears midstream in this article. First, he pushes the idea that we need a good recession to readjust our expectations and reset the economic software, so to speak; but then in an interesting exposition of TALF concludes that the scheme may be worth it afterall.

    If, however, the economy remains fundamentally weak and pessimistic expectations prevail, the new wave of securitized issues will ultimately fail. As the government loans are no recourse loans, as Mr. Cohan points out, then taxpayers will again be called upon to bail out the government and the Fed.

    I don't think you can simply talk about financial markets and the various schemes that are put together to resurrect credit markets without talking about the real side of the economy, especially the impact of potential new taxes on individuals and corporations either directly or indirectly. Ultimately, the benefits of TARP and TALF are squarely dependent on economic growth, and I don't see this as any sort of a priority in this administration.
    May 19 09:41 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
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