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Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
A "Stimulus Package"?
by Thomas Sowell
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Previous stock market crashes and previous downturns in the economy worked themselves out faster and less painfully than the Great Depression of the 1930s, just as the 1987 crisis did.

The track record of government intervention is far less impressive than its rhetoric.

One of the biggest problems with government intervention in the economy is that politicians usually have neither the knowledge nor the incentives to intervene at the right time.

Bruce Bartlett has pointed out that most government intervention in an economic downturn comes too late. That is, the problem it is trying to solve has already worked itself out and the government intervention can create new problems.

More fundamentally, markets readjust themselves for a reason. That reason is that people pay a price for their misjudgments and mistakes.

Government interventions are usually based on trying to stop them from having to pay that price.

People who went way out on a limb to buy a house that they could not afford are now being pictured as victims of a heartless market or deceptive lenders.

Just a few years ago, people who went out on that limb made money big-time in a skyrocketing housing market. But now that they have been caught in the ups and downs that markets have gone through for centuries, the government is supposed to bail them out.

Solving short-run problems, especially in an election year, often means creating long-run problems. Pumping money into the economy can help many problems. but do not be surprised if it also leads to inflationary pressures and financial repercussions around the world.

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Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Just cut spending.
It's simple. The market takes care of itself. And once again, the government feels compelled to "fix" a faltering economy. First, it's arguable if the US is near or currently in a recession. The market is cyclic and it's expected to behave this way. It's presumptuous to freak out because of a potential recession in our economy. The mainstream media likes to portray this potential recession as a "weeping and gnashing of teeth" scenario, but constant talk and speculation is only fueling a potential recession. Stop worrying! It will be okay.

Yes, the stimulus could prove to be a fix to our slow economy, but it's only a quickie. But the quick fix is extremely out weighed by the long-term consequences of the stimulus package. Let me explain...

With a deficit near 11 trillion dollars, how is this stimulus packaged being funded? Well, it's all borrowed on interest and it's mostly from China. Now, is this smart for US government to spend money it doesn't have? Of course not! The government is racking up a bill for future tax payers to pay. O, what a burden! The long-term consequences out weigh the short-term fix.

A logical solution would be to cut spending. The stimulus package puts money that the government would have spent carelessly into the hands of taxpayers. So, instead of spending on inefficient social programs and endless wars, taxpayers can now buy the coveted iPod touch.

Just cut spending. Balance the budget. Lower taxes. These are all good solutions for a lowering economy. Giving out borrowed money is not a solution, it's the problem.

it's just a wee little package
No, no, that's not a shot at your size problems. I mean the "stim". It's not big enough to cause probs. Of course, when you don't want to spend money you talk about how many MILLIONS OF DOLLARS it is and when you do want to spend it one talks percentages. This is apparently both so huge a stim it is going to enslave us to yellow-skinned creditors forevermore and not big enough to do any good, right chappie? Granted it would be better to actually drop money from helicopters, but the distribution doesn't work well. I like the direct payment idea. Usually, they lower target rates to banks and only the banks and people taking out a loan get more money to spend. This spreads it out, spreads it out in cash, and everybody decides for themselves. Each is free to save, spend or send it back to the govie.
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