Obviously, you get my point hence your dodge.
As I said to SF, no one in this thread has mentioned the Obama Administration's "created or saved" figures except for you and SF. Why is that?
You are simply being ridiculous yet again.
YOU claim there was a positive change in employment due to the stimulus. Since we KNOW that the total number of jobs in this country decreased, you HAVE to be talking about jobs 'saved' by the stimulus. If you are not, then please explain how you have a positive change without talking about jobs saved or created.
I'm not claiming anything. I'm telling you that everyone that has assessed the impact of the stimulus on employment has said that the stimulus bill had a positive effect on the employment. And it does not necessarily have to be jobs "saved" (although the difference between a job saved and a job created for purposes of the unemployment rate is exactly nil).
You JUST stated that no one other than myself and Damo were talking about jobs 'saved or created'. That is completely absurd.
If the stimulus had a positive effect on employment then you HAVE to be talking about jobs created or saved. Do you not?
Yes... it DOES have to be jobs 'saved'... because we KNOW the NET change in jobs went DOWN. Thus the only way you can possibly describe the stimulus as having a 'positive' effect is if you are saying MORE jobs would have been lost without it. That means those jobs you are referring to were 'saved'.
Yea...how dare those god damned unions try and create a middle class. Just who the hell do they think they are? [/sarcasm]Well, there should be this time. I hope. That's if they actually spend stimulus money building things rather than saving public (union members only need apply) jobs.
You are silly/stupid/ignorant/blinded by partisinship/ect. to pretend that the tide has not turned and had the stimulus not happened MANY MANY more jobs would have been lost, thus those jobs were saved!
As if. If it was possible to build an economy on public sector jobs only the Soviet Union would still be around.Yea...how dare those god damned unions try and create a middle class. Just who the hell do they think they are? [/sarcasm]
I'm not claiming anything. I'm telling you that everyone that has assessed the impact of the stimulus on employment has said that the stimulus bill had a positive effect on the employment. And it does not necessarily have to be jobs "saved" (although the difference between a job saved and a job created for purposes of the unemployment rate is exactly nil).
lool...i'm not claiming, but i'm telling you that everyone else says it, i'm just not claiming it for myself
Exactly. I am aware of my limitations. I have no basis for claiming anything with respect to the impact of the stimulus bill. I only know what I have read and everything that I have read says that the stimulus bill had a positive impact on employment.
translation:
this is how i get out being wrong all the time, i just never claim anything, i always rely on other people's opinions, because if i think for myself, i will be wrong and then i will kill myself
As if. If it was possible to build an economy on public sector jobs only the Soviet Union would still be around.
I don't think we can say that with much certainty. The predictions were that job losses were going to slow down without a stimulus.
Rubbish, spend the money buying things, this gives a larger effect on the economy than just a paycheck. This uses the same "stimulus" logic that bush used. Give people money they'll spend it, jobs will be "created or saved"...It's not possible to do that, but the argument is a strawman.
The idea was just to get people back to work, and get money flowing in the economy again. If getting them back to work happens to be at more public sector jobs in the beginning, fine. Get them a paycheck. They'll spend that paycheck at a department store, local restaurant, online, wherever, and if enough people are back to work & doing that, all of those businesses will benefit, and need to hire. As they hire, those people will be getting paychecks, and spending at a dept. store, restaurant, online, etc. And so on.
That's the idea. It's not "let's build the economy on public sector jobs, and keep everything in a bubble"....
Rubbish, spend the money buying things, this gives a larger effect on the economy than just a paycheck. This uses the same "stimulus" logic that bush used. Give people money they'll spend it, jobs will be "created or saved"...
It's just not the most effective way to rebuild a faltering economy, not by a long shot. It is why predictions that said unemployment would go up to around 10% rather than Obama's 8% were correct. Pay companies to build roads, don't just "create" government jobs because their unions gave you cash it's ineffective and gives the appearance that the goal wasn't to fix anything, just to give graft to your benefactors. Both may work short-term, but they are both bad plans. Put people to work building things, not more bureaucracy. This is one of the basic principals of Keynesian Economics, spend the money on infrastructure.
I'll also notice here that people are ignoring those people no longer counted on unemployment because they've given up. These were the people that made Bush's actual growth into "the worst economy since the Great Depression" long before the collapse.
The old "translation" cop out. Nice one, counselor!
Rubbish, spend the money buying things, this gives a larger effect on the economy than just a paycheck. This uses the same "stimulus" logic that bush used. Give people money they'll spend it, jobs will be "created or saved"...
It's just not the most effective way to rebuild a faltering economy, not by a long shot. It is why predictions that said unemployment would go up to around 10% rather than Obama's 8% were correct. Pay companies to build roads, don't just "create" government jobs because their unions gave you cash it's ineffective and gives the appearance that the goal wasn't to fix anything, just to give graft to your benefactors. Both may work short-term, but they are both bad plans. Put people to work building things, not more bureaucracy. This is one of the basic principals of Keynesian Economics, spend the money on infrastructure.
well weather or not people think its working, company's are still going belly up, contractors cant get jobs unless its road construction. If the economy is picking up its definitely not showing here in MN. No one know what's going to come from this admin, so why would people risk more.