martybegan
Diamond Member
- Apr 5, 2010
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Because you are dead wrong about them.
Just because you believce something doesnt make it true.
Now digest this information if you have the guts.
-SNIP-
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Because you are dead wrong about them.
Just because you believce something doesnt make it true.
Now digest this information if you have the guts.
-SNIP-
Business Investment on the Rise While Other Economic Factors Falter « HousingWire
Im not overstating anything.
I am telling you corps dont invest in new equipment to slow down production.
U.S.-Korea trade pact would provide boost to Hawaii's economy
By Gina Kim Nakamura
POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jun 15, 2011
President Barack Obama's National Export Initiative aims to double the U.S. exports within the next five years as a way to support and create 2 million new jobs in the U.S. The U.S.-Korea trade deal offers the best opportunity to jump-start this initiative.
Hawaii stands to gain immensely from this landmark agreement, which would benefit the economy by creating new jobs.
All furniture exports and many manufactured goods produced in Hawaii would enter Korea duty-free.
Korean duties on major Hawaii agricultural products such as papayas and coffee would be eliminated.
In addition, the agreement would simplify and expedite customs procedures, enabling Hawaii businesses to reach Korean companies more quickly.
Korea is one of Hawaii's three largest export markets for goods. In 2009, Hawaii's exports to Korea totaled $67 million, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Korea is the fifth-largest importer of American agricultural products and the third-largest importer of Hawaii's agricultural products.
U.S.-Korea trade pact would provide boost to Hawaii's economy - Hawaii Editorials - Staradvertiser.com
You look pretty silly in light of the cold hard facts I just gave you
I really don't care who gets credit or blame, I just want the US economy to improve, period.
Playing the blame game doesn't help. IMO
Because you are dead wrong about them.
Just because you believce something doesnt make it true.
Now digest this information if you have the guts.
Top 5 Ways to Kill the U.S. Recovery - The Curious Capitalist - TIME.com
Take the latest Wall Street Journal economic forecasting survey: Economists put the chances of a double-dip recession in the next year at a mere 16%. And a lot of them think U.S. growth will practically double in speed in this year's second half. And yet, consumers are hurting, unemployment is up, and housing prices continue to fall. So what's with all the freakish positivity?
Many bullish economists think a looming "dip" is merely a "blip" caused mostly by fleeting events. The crisis in Japan disrupted our supply of manufactured goods, pushing down retail sales. Trouble in the Middle East drove gas prices up, which kept consumers from buying other stuff. But even if those headwinds pass, it doesn't take complex math to suss out that we're hardly in the clear. When you're highly leveraged and you're already growing at a pretty tepid rate, it doesn't take big shocks to fall into another recession, says economist Carmen Reinhart of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, who researches the history of debt crises. The mistake many economists make, she says, is comparing this recession to others in the recent past. "Using the U.S. business cycle since World War II is not the right comparison," she says, and here's one reason why: Household debt as a percent of Americans' incomes is now twice what it was at the bottom of the recession in 1982. That alone is reason enough to think we're headed for a new kind of pain. (See "Is a Double Dip Becoming More Likely?")
Read more: Top 5 Ways to Kill the U.S. Recovery - The Curious Capitalist - TIME.com
Mrs. Clean and I went to Chatanooga over the weekend to attend a niece's wedding.
The airports were packed, each flight we took was full to capacity, the hotels were fully booked and the restaurants all had lines to get in.
If this recession that we keep hearing about is so awful, and nobody's working, where are all these people getting the money to travel?
Guys what will you do when the ecnomy recovers before the election?
Will you claim credit or will you just deny its steam?
Its what is going to happen so get you right wing meme ready
Because you are dead wrong about them.
Just because you believce something doesnt make it true.
Now digest this information if you have the guts.
Top 5 Ways to Kill the U.S. Recovery - The Curious Capitalist - TIME.com
Take the latest Wall Street Journal economic forecasting survey: Economists put the chances of a double-dip recession in the next year at a mere 16%. And a lot of them think U.S. growth will practically double in speed in this year's second half. And yet, consumers are hurting, unemployment is up, and housing prices continue to fall. So what's with all the freakish positivity?
Many bullish economists think a looming "dip" is merely a "blip" caused mostly by fleeting events. The crisis in Japan disrupted our supply of manufactured goods, pushing down retail sales. Trouble in the Middle East drove gas prices up, which kept consumers from buying other stuff. But even if those headwinds pass, it doesn't take complex math to suss out that we're hardly in the clear. When you're highly leveraged and you're already growing at a pretty tepid rate, it doesn't take big shocks to fall into another recession, says economist Carmen Reinhart of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, who researches the history of debt crises. The mistake many economists make, she says, is comparing this recession to others in the recent past. "Using the U.S. business cycle since World War II is not the right comparison," she says, and here's one reason why: Household debt as a percent of Americans' incomes is now twice what it was at the bottom of the recession in 1982. That alone is reason enough to think we're headed for a new kind of pain. (See "Is a Double Dip Becoming More Likely?")
Read more: Top 5 Ways to Kill the U.S. Recovery - The Curious Capitalist - TIME.com