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rushmc

Or, is is because the down side makes them look stupid?

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It's called "stimulus".



You are aware that you can't spend your way out of a deficit right?
"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -- Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson Papers, 334

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You are correct John but what most people don't understand is that 20-25% (on average) of a cars entire co2 emissions are under the production of the vehicle. Huge amounts of electricity (about 50 percent from coal) are used to make steel and oil is used to make many parts of todays cars. Retiring a car early can actually have a negative impact on the enviroment, not to mention my wallet being used to pay for some one elses new car has a negative impact on me and my financial situation. Also means I will have less cars to fix thus hurting my buisiness. Also sending profits overseas does absolutly nothing for the US.

I see very little good in this bill but then again it was put together by the same people that want government to control us not help us.



I can't join in at the moment more than to say "thank you" for presenting this argument. It's a breath of fresh air by comparison to some.
It's a tough thing to wrangle with. We're a country where 70% of our economy is based on consumption so to grow we would normally turn towards consumption as the fix. But we're also a country which consumes to the point of unsustainability. So what's the best approach?

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The idea is that we get back more than we put in.



Are you familiar with the "spending multiplier" concept in economics?



Just a bit. And that's not an understatement.



In short (and oversimplified) form, it goes like this:

When I spend a dollar, the guy I spend it with has an extra dollar. He goes out and spends 50 cents of it. The guy he spent that 50 cents with goes out and spends 25 cents. So, my dollar of spending actually ends up generating $1.75 worth of spending in the economy. That extra 75 cents is the "multiplier." Normally, it's expresses as a percentage, so we can say that the "multiplier" of my spending is 175%--in other words, when I spend a dollar, a buck seventy five actually gets spent in the economy.

The weird thing is that different people's spending has different multiplier rates. That's largely because they spend on different things. Even stranger, government spending appears to have a different multiplier than private spending. And tax cuts (if you think of them as spending) have a different multiplier yet.

The conundrum is this: private spending appears to have the largest multiplier, government spending has a substantially smaller multiplier, and tax cuts have the smallest of all.

The real debate (and this relates back to your point) is whether the multiplier on government spending is actually more or less than 1 (or 100%). Meaning, do we actually get out back more than we put in, or not?

Most of the economists who've examined this have estimated the multiplier on government spending at around .8 (because the government spending crowds out private spending, this reducing the multiplier below 1). Private spending in the US, on the other hand, tends to get measured (remember that we're talking about a ton of different economists doing different studies) at something around 1.5.

And that's the crux of the "stimulus" debate. Do we really get back more than we put in?

According to the Obama economic team, the answer is yes. They've estimated the "stimulus" multiplier at about 1.5 (which has to be overly generous, given that that is about where private spending falls). Other economists have estimated it at less than 1 (more like the traditional government .8).

Who's right? We don't actually know.

There's an interesting article here that goes into some of the numbers, but I'd definitely look around and find other articles--like I said the opinions of various economists (and their numbers) are all over the map.
-- Tom Aiello

Tom@SnakeRiverBASE.com
SnakeRiverBASE.com

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So, the people that can afford the new car... Most likely already have it. The people that can't afford a new car are not likely to get rid of one they have so they can now have a car payment. And those that are poor would be ill advised to go deeper in debt....Even if they can get a loan right now.



leave it to the government to miss the boat again. aim a program at the poor to help increase their debt. Isn't that how the subprime mortgage problem started?

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leave it to the government to miss the boat again. aim a program at the poor to help increase their debt. Isn't that how the subprime mortgage problem started?



This is not a program "aimed at the poor".
Nevermind. Have "fun".

Tom, thanks for the post and the link. I'll check it out.

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Have you even thought of the consequenses?

The only one that I see so far is the bill should have only allowed the credit to be used for domestic made cars. Keep the money in America!!! Support American jobs!


Aren't an awful lot of the "imports" especially the Japanese ones, already built here?


The Toyota Camry and Honda Accord are built in America, with more American content than a Chevy Malibu. :|
So I try and I scream and I beg and I sigh
Just to prove I'm alive, and it's alright
'Cause tonight there's a way I'll make light of my treacherous life
Make light!

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So it isn't black-or-white. OK, here's a summary:

Cash For Clunkers is good because:

-it gets gas-guzzling polluters off the road sooner, thereby reducing demand for oil, and benefiting the environment
-it stimulates the auto industry, which in turn has a ripple effect upon the entire economy

It's bad because:

-it takes decently-serviceable and reasonably clean and economical cars off the road prematurely;
- it reduces the available supply (thereby driving up the price) of cheap, older used cars, and available parts to keep them on the road, which hurts lower-income people;
- it hurts non-dealership repair shops, which get most of their business from fixing cars past their manufacturers' warranties.

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In one week, one simple, relatively inexpensive program



$1 billion is a lot of money. A thousand "relatively inexpensive" programs is a $trillion.

Don't we all love paying twice as much for something as market value?

[Reply]not only reduces fuel demand, reduces foreign oil demand and boosts the economy



Reducing demand is usually a good way to sag the economy.

[Reply] but it turns right wing hardliners into science embracing, global warming adherent environmentalists



Interesting, eh? The left supports pollution and the right doesn't. Strange bedfellows...

[Reply] whose primary concern lies with the potential impact of the poorest citizens of not only our country but the world!



Which actually seems to be a consistent thing. Hasn't that been something frequently brought up - the cost of environmentalism on those without resources to bear it?

[Reply]WOW!!!!!! I can't wait to see how this new found concern pans out in the upcoming cap and trade and health care debates.



How the economy is damaged by it? Seems like that's always been the first point.


My wife is hotter than your wife.

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