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#408 | |||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
First, two corrections:
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Now, an appeal: DarJones, You may have thought, and want to continue to think, that you were challenging one of my core beliefs by issuing that insult, but you were and are mistaken about that. Instead, your misunderstanding of my admittedly-misunderstandable use of "result" led to your coming to a faulty conclusion. Had your conclusion been correct, your use of "deliberate misattribution" would have been correct. But neither actually was correct. We all make such mistakes. Now that I've admitted my own mistake in using that word without further elaboration, and posted a clearer expression of my intent, it's time for you to admit the mistakes you made in reacting to my original posting, such as not asking for clarification before you proceeded to insult me on the assumption that you'd made no mistake in interpretation. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-07-07 at 15:28 |
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#409 | ||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
265778 Posts |
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[1] The "balanced budgets" submitted by Clinton included the same accounting-gimmick of "borrowing" several hundred billion $ from the Social Security "trust fund" [I use quotes here because as Mish Shedlock likes to say, "there is no trust, and there is no fund - only a giant stack of IOUs from Treasury"] as has sadly become standard operating procedure over the past decades. Thus, absent this bogus accounting, the budget was not in fact balanced. [2] The dotcom bust would have occurred irrespective of who succeeded Clinton, even had they done exactly as he would have done. Thus, while nominally balanced, the "legendary" Clinton budgets did not reflect sustainable levels of government spending. Of course Bush the younger went out of his way to unbalance the budget even further by way of reckless tax-cutting and warmongering. For that,he deserves eternal ignominy ... but when we talks about "budget facts",let's talk about all the salient facts rather than weasel-word concepts like "nominally balanced", shall we? ------------------------------ Continuing a recent discussion sub-thread, today`s WSJ has a piece on the possible "negative incentivization" effects of continuing jobless benefits without attaching any real strings: Long Recession Ignites Debate on Jobless Benefits Quote:
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The full article details a nice flip-flop by the administration’s Larry Summers on this issue, too. |
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#410 | ||||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
769210 Posts |
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"Warning - I did not bother to check the factual accuracy of my comments before I posted them." Quote:
But it's another set of things for you: (a) to have assumed something that's not true, as I did not do, (b) to have failed to double-check your assumption by actually going to a source such as the web site of the Office of Management and Budget, as I did, and (c) to have not looked up the figures in some factual publication such as "Historical Tables - Budget of the U.S. Government - Fiscal Year 2011" at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget...ssets/hist.pdf, as I did, and (c) to have posted false statements of your own in an attempt to (wrongly) portray my statements as deceptive. Facts: According to that ("Historical ... 2011") publication's "Table 1.1—SUMMARY OF RECEIPTS, OUTLAYS, AND SURPLUSES OR DEFICITS (–): 1789–2015", fiscal years 1999 and 2000 had on-budget surpluses ($1.920 billion and $86.422 billion, respectively). Furthermore, no other fiscal years since 1980 had on-budget surpluses, and the only other fiscal years since 1980 which had total (on-budget plus off-budget) surpluses were 1998 and 2001. Quote:
You can't really falsify my statements without bringing in such external factors and attempting to falsely portray them as an essential part of the basic budget facts, can you, Ernst? Quote:
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Don't you mean "government revenues" or "government surpluses" there instead of "government spending"? Quote:
Ernst can't refute the statements I actually posted, so he, like DarJones, pretends that what I wrote has no meaning unless other factors, factors I never mentioned or assumed or denied, are thrown in. He, like DarJones, needs to first acknowledge that what I wrote was factually correct. Then we can go on to discuss those other factors. Without a common agreement between participants to at least acknowledge established facts as facts, it will be difficult to have a reasonable discussion of opinions, speculations and theories. BTW, I never used the phrase "nominally balanced". Ernst has not demonstrated that any of my concepts were "weasel-word concepts". Instead, he, like DarJones, has used other words in a weaselly way to try to spin my factual statements. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-07-07 at 22:37 |
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#411 |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Cheesehead/Richard, please spare us the all-too-predictable grandstanding about "so-and-so can't respond to the actual question/assertion/etc, so is doing-something-or-other-annoying" polemics ... it's tiresome, you should try to hear yourself speak sometime.
Back to the myth of the Clinton surpluses... You bandy about terms like "black and white budget figures" [what, because the government file you downloaded prints them that way?] and on-budget versus off-budget, then plunk down a massive PDF, as though that equates to "the truth" ... let's cut to the chase. I claim the Clinton "surpluses" included papering over significant amounts of real deficit via "borrowing" from social security - you don't actually seem to know where to find those data in your blizzard of "facts". I'll make it simple - show us the year-over-year "intragovernmental holdings" data during the Clinton years [No 300-plus-page PDF needed ... just a simple single table]. And instead of looking at "Debt held by the public," (or "Public Debt", depending on the source), show us the "Total National Debt" during the same years, then please explain why it goes up year after year, even in alleged-surplus years. Regarding my comment that the "Clinton budgets did not reflect sustainable levels of government spending", you can look at either the receipt or expenditure part of the equation ... if expenditures (ignoring Washington accounting trickery for now) only balance outlays for a few years which saw unsustainable income from a one-time windfall (the dotcom stock market bubble), then because the income is unsustainable, then by definition so are the expenditures. [Did that really need a multi-paragraph polemical reply from you? And please spare me your silly "translation of what Ernst said" ... you think silly gibes like that impress anyone? And I swear, if any of your next few posts looks like the above clusterf*ck of whining-in-your-inimitably-obsessive-fashion, you're going on my perma-ignore list. I'm trying to have a reasonable adult discussion here, not win the Junior Debate Club Stump-Hogging Award.] I repeat my assertion: Without the bogus "revenue" resulting from raiding the social security trust fund, there would not have been and balanced/surplus budgets during the Clinton years. Yes, things were made much worse by Bushie - but both of them used accounting sleight-of-hand to make the budgets look more-balanced than they actually were. |
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#412 |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Addendum: Wikipedia does a much better job than your mega-PDF at explaining things:
"These on-budget and off-budget items essentially amount to accounting gimmicks and schemes. In reality, what really matters is how much money comes in and how much money goes out. The federal government publishes the total debt owed (public and intragovernmental holdings) at the end of each fiscal year [50] and since FY1957, the amount of debt held by the federal government has increased every single year." |
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#413 | |||||
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Feb 2003
2568 Posts |
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Unless you choose to take the effort to justify paying further attention to you, this will be my last response to you on this thread. |
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#414 | ||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
11110000011002 Posts |
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Are you proposing that the Wikipedia data are facts over which we will not argue as to their validity unless we can cite specific official sources that differ with Wikipedia? That is, any accurate citation of Wikipedia data over which there is no validity dispute will be considered a correct attribution? Quote:
Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-07-08 at 04:27 |
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#415 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
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You do, of course, remain free to withdraw from the discussion at any time. |
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#416 | ||||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
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However, as I already pledged, I'll try to restrain myself in that regard. |
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#417 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
1E0C16 Posts |
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It's not whether Clinton budgets had a real surplus or not -- it's that the Clinton budgets were collectively far more fiscally responsible than the collective budgets of any of our last three Republican presidents, but conservatives will go to great rhetorical lengths (even so far as to characterize a simple factual statement as a "deliberate misattribution", as we've seen) to deny or obscure that, because they're marching in step with the new fiscal hypocrisy that came out of conservative think tanks in the late 1970s. Let's look at the Gross Federal Debt (from Table 7.1) and annual changes since fiscal year 1981 (the last Carter budget): (Note: the annual change and annual change percentage increases in the following three tables are from my own computations, not quoted from the PDF. There may be errors -- please call such to my attention.) Code:
Gross Fiscal Federal annual Year Debt change 1981 994,828 1982 1,137,315 + 142,487 1983 1,371,660 + 234,345 1984 1,564,586 + 192,926 1985 1,817,423 + 252,837 1986 2,120,501 + 303,078 1987 2,345,956 + 225,455 1988 2,601,104 + 255,148 1989 2,867,800 + 266,696 1990 3,206,290 + 338,490 1991 3,598,178 + 391,888 1992 4,001,787 + 403,609 1993 4,351,044 + 349,257 1994 4,643,307 + 292,263 1995 4,920,586 + 277,279 1996 5,181,465 + 260,879 1997 5,369,206 + 187,741 1998 5,478,189 + 108,983 1999 5,605,523 + 127,334 2000 5,628,700 + 23,177 2001 5,769,881 + 141,181 2002 6,198,401 + 428,520 2003 6,760,014 + 561,613 2004 7,354,657 + 594,643 2005 7,905,300 + 550,643 2006 8,451,350 + 546,050 2007 8,950,744 + 499,394 2008 9,986,082 +1,035,338 2009 11,875,851 +1,889,769 Code:
Gross Fiscal Federal annual Year Debt change 2000 5,628,700 + 23,177 1998 5,478,189 + 108,983 1999 5,605,523 + 127,334 2001 5,769,881 + 141,181 1982 1,137,315 + 142,487 1997 5,369,206 + 187,741 1984 1,564,586 + 192,926 1987 2,345,956 + 225,455 1983 1,371,660 + 234,345 1985 1,817,423 + 252,837 1988 2,601,104 + 255,148 1996 5,181,465 + 260,879 1989 2,867,800 + 266,696 1995 4,920,586 + 277,279 1994 4,643,307 + 292,263 1986 2,120,501 + 303,078 1990 3,206,290 + 338,490 1993 4,351,044 + 349,257 1991 3,598,178 + 391,888 1992 4,001,787 + 403,609 2002 6,198,401 + 428,520 2007 8,950,744 + 499,394 2006 8,451,350 + 546,050 2005 7,905,300 + 550,643 2003 6,760,014 + 561,613 2004 7,354,657 + 594,643 2008 9,986,082 +1,035,338 2009 11,875,851 +1,889,769 Let's sort them another way -- by annual percentage increase (after all, a 261B increase from 4.9T the previous year (5.30%) was a relatively lighter increase than a 255B increase from 2.3T the previous year (10.88%), wasn't it?): Code:
Gross annual Fiscal Federal change as Year Debt percentage 2000 5,628,700 + 0.41 % 1998 5,478,189 + 2.03 % 1999 5,605,523 + 2.32 % 2001 5,769,881 + 2.51 % 1997 5,369,206 + 3.62 % 1996 5,181,465 + 5.30 % 2007 8,950,744 + 5.91 % 1995 4,920,586 + 5.97 % 1994 4,643,307 + 6.72 % 2006 8,451,350 + 6.91 % 2002 6,198,401 + 7.43 % 2005 7,905,300 + 7.49 % 1993 4,351,044 + 8.73 % 2004 7,354,657 + 8.80 % 2003 6,760,014 + 9.06 % 1989 2,867,800 + 10.25 % 1987 2,345,956 + 10.63 % 1988 2,601,104 + 10.88 % 1992 4,001,787 + 11.22 % 2008 9,986,082 + 11.57 % 1990 3,206,290 + 11.80 % 1991 3,598,178 + 12.22 % 1984 1,564,586 + 14.07 % 1982 1,137,315 + 14.32 % 1985 1,817,423 + 16.16 % 1986 2,120,501 + 16.68 % 2009 11,875,851 + 18.92 % 1983 1,371,660 + 20.61 % It's true that a decrease in Gross Federal Debt would be better than any increase at all, but Republicans keep claiming that they're better at controlling the debt than Democrats, whereas the figures show just the reverse. Conservatives have been preying on the general public's economic ignorance for political purposes for 30 years. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-07-08 at 10:04 |
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#418 | |||||||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
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As you may notice in my preceding post, I am quite comfortable with the idea that all of the Clinton fiscal years had deficits, according to the accounting methods used in Table 7.1 (Not that I'm comfortable with ever-increasing debt, but that whether a particular method shows a positive or negative figure for a particular year is unimportant by itself in isolation from context.) What's important is to make fiscal comparisons on an even scale, with the same method used for all figures being compared. So, it's not that I had a core belief that only certain accounting methods were correct, or that only the methods showing surpluses for some Clinton years were acceptable. I suggest that you examine the reasons why you came to that mistaken assumption. Perhaps the following analysis will help. When discussing figures from Table 13.1, which are figured according to the accounting methods usually assumed when deficits and surpluses are discussed in everyday conversation, and many online forums, they are all to be taken in the context of the accounting methods used for Table 13.1. But you failed to do that. When I was quoting from the context of Table 13.1, you were criticizing me, as far as I can tell (because you haven't fully answered my questions), on the basis of assumed use of a different set of accounting methods. That didn't challenge any core belief of mine! It just showed your ignorance of the context in which the figures were calculated. Your insult was based on ignorance of accounting context, apparently. (You're free to offer some other explanation, if you wish.) Quote:
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But you were mistaken -- that ("attribute the balanced budget to Clinton") is not any restatement of my core belief, because you didn't bother taking any time to determine whether your assumption about my core belief was correct. Quote:
That failure was one thing; your arrogance in posting an insult based on the supposition that you hadn't made any mistake was quite another. Quote:
In your first context, there were no Clinton surpluses. But in this second context of yours, there are Clinton surpluses which can be wiped out! First, you're insisting that there were no surpluses (and my statement to the contrary was a "deliberate misattribution"!!), then you're talking about existing surpluses that could be wiped out. Did you deliberately misattribute yourself when you said the same thing I did? No. The insult applied only to me, because you didn't like what I was saying. But that contradiction didn't alert you to the fact that you had just switched between your first context (in which my "result" statement was a "deliberate misattribution"), which didn't match mine, and a different context that did match mine (in which my "result" statement was simply factual and true), did it? Quote:
You're continuing to speak from a context in which Clinton did submit balanced budgets, only a short time after you accused me of a "deliberate misattribution" because I posted a statement that Clinton submitted balanced budgets! You accuse me of "deliberate misattribution" when I speak of Clinton balanced budgets, then you speak of them yourself only a short while later!!! Are you beginning, just beginning, to see why you owe me some big apologies? (Not just for the insult -- both words, please -- but also for your multiple subsequent refusals to acknowledge your mistakes even though I tried several different ways of explaining myself to you) Or are you now going to post some further explanation to try to deny your responsibility for your own words? Quote:
I'm waiting. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-07-08 at 19:22 |
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