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A consultant is one that is employed or involved in giving professional advice to the public or to those practicing a profession. It is customary to offer a specific offering without regard to other parameters that may affect the ultimate outcome.

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Tuesday, May 11, 2010

What we need... sounds like Greek to me?

The European debt problem, and in particular Greece, should make us critically aware on just how we are connected to the global economic market and vice versa.  Here are a few suggestions, opinionated indeed, that we should consider:
  • Cutting spending and raising taxes is a risky formula. It doesn’t have a great track record: Since 1980, some 30 debt-plagued nations have tried to reduce their indebtedness through such austerity measures. In practically all cases, according to a new study by financial giant UBS, the increase in national debt was only slowed, not reversed, by such policy pain.
  • Trying to take more from rich people has its limits. Higher and higher income taxes or even wealth taxes create incentive to find tax havens and avoid productive work or capital allocation.
  • Cutting spending is better than raising taxes. Hey, I even have a study to prove it: A 2009 study by Harvard University’s Alberto Alesina and Silvia Ardagna. It examined 40 years of debt reduction plans by advanced economies and found that “those based upon spending cuts and no tax increases are more likely to reduce deficits and debt over GDP ratios than those based upon tax increases.” They’re also associated with higher economic growth.
  • Less spending plus more growth: But what if (a) government spending tracks current projections over the next 70 years, (b) government revenue as a percentage of GDP stays at its historic average of 18 percent, and (c) the economy were somehow to grow a bit faster than its 20th-century average, about 3.5 percent. Under those conditions, according a recent study by JPMorgan Chase, a much wealthier America (generating $100 trillion in tax revenue rather than $50 trillion) would be able to afford projected spending without raising taxes. The long-term budget gap would vanish. … Indeed, that is typically how successful countries in the UBS study managed to get their books in order; they grew their economies faster than they added debt. … Easier said than done, of course. … And there is no one policy to help make that happen. It will take a full-spectrum effort: lower taxes on companies and capital, pork-free spending on infrastructure and basic research (beyond health care), an education system that teaches students rather than feathering the nests of teachers’ unions (not the teachers...but the UNIONS!). Every aspect of U.S. public policy will need to be optimized for economic growth.
Spending cuts are not easy to do while fighting two wars overseas and with the majority of populace worse off than before. In the name of growth here, all we can see is the skimming of money from the middle class and being syphoned into the speculative activity by the unregulated financial trading industry who in the name of allocating capital are churning it for short term gains to line their pockets and balk in the name of paying their share of taxes though have survived by the taxed money bailouts. The financial markets have evolved to be worse than the casino and wagering activity.

CNBC's Maria Bartiromo always starts off her show "The Closing Bell" with the question... "Do you know where your money is?"  Well according to my witness it appears that Wall Street doesn't consider it "your money", but theirs.  The normal 401(k) investor is just along for the ride.  They continue you to participate in the program.  By the way, how is that going for you?

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