About Me

Name: zapdoodat
Email: zapdoodat@yahoo.com Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Blog Roll

 

George 'W' bush's DEBT bomb.

A damming indictment of George 'W' bush and the Republican Party's 'cut taxes and spend even more' philosophy.

And now for some quotes from the 2001 era from Mr. Alan Greenspan's book, 'Age of Turbulence.'

We start on page 213, enter George 'W' Bush.

"The other issue looming large for the Fed was the disappearance of the national debt.  Strange as it may seem in hindsight, in January 2001 the possibility was real.   Nearly a decade of rising productivity and growth and budget discipline had put the U.S. government in a position to generate surplus's 'as far as the eye could see,' to borrow the phrase coined by President Reagan's budget director David Stockman in projecting deficits nearly two decades earlier.  Even allowing for the recession that might now be setting in, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office was getting ready to raise its projection of the surplus to a stunning $5.6 trillion over ten years.  This was $3 trillion higher than the CBO had forecast in 1999, and $1 trillion more than it had predicted just the previous July."

Folks, look at what Republicans have done to our mighty and proud nation.  Another excerpt from Alan Greenspan's 'Age of Turbulence' on Republican malfeasance in the 21st century.

"But now the projected surpluses were so large that debt repayment would be completed within a very few years. Yet the surpluses would continue.  The CBO statisticians now envisioned the surpluses under current policy at $281 billion in 2001, $313 billion in 2002, $359 billion in 2003, and so on.  Assuming no major shift in fiscal policy, the CBO expected the reducible debt to be fully paid off by 2006; any surpluses thereafter would have to be held in some form of non-federal assets.  In 2006 the surplus would break $500 billion.  Thereafter, more than a half trillion extra dollars would flow into Uncle Sam's coffers each year."

And now, the last and most insightful quote of them all. It shows the Republican Party's ideological philosophy in the 21st century according to lifetime Republican, Alan Greenspan, in his book 'The Age of Turbulence', from page 217.

"Little value was placed rigorous economic policy debate or the weighing of long-term consequences."


Tags: debt  
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (2) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Repulicans worship at the Temple of DEBT

Let's explore Republican fiscal policy using Alan Greenspan's book 'The Age of Turbulence.'

From page 102, we have the following tidbit of his thoughts at the end of 1988.

"The economic indicators, meanwhile, were far from encouraging.  Huge government deficits under Reagan had caused the national debt to the public to almost triple, from just under $700 billion at the start of his presidency to more than $2 trillion at the end of fiscal year 1988.  The dollar was falling, and people were worried about America losing its competitive edge."

and from page 112, a quote taken from the end of Ronald Reagan's presidency.

"When George Bush won that fall, I hoped the Fed and his administration would get along.  Everybody knew that whoever came in after Reagan would face huge economic challenges: not just an eventual downturn in the business cycle, but whopping deficits and the rapidly mounting national debt."

Then Sir Greespan takes a walk down memory lane with his concerns for 'Bubba' Clinton

On page 143,

In 1993, "Clinton had outlined a broad, ambitious economic agenda during his campaign.  He wanted to cut taxes on the middle class, halve the federal deficit, stimulate job growth, increase U.s. competitiveness through new education and training programs, invest in the nation's infrastructure, and more."   

and

"If he wanted to address the economy's long-term health, the deficit was by far the most pressing concern.  I'd made that argument at the start of Bush's term, and now the problem was four years worse.  The national debt held by the public had risen to $3 trillion, causing interest payments to become the third-largest federal expense after Social Security and defense."  

and on pages 184-5, some quotes from the middle of Bubba's presidency from Mr. Alan Greenspan's book.

"Almost overnight, the Clinton administration found itself facing a budget surplus that was expanding as fast as the budget had dwindled."

"Not a single Republican had voted for the milestone deficit-reduction budget in 1993."

"My longtime involvement in Social Security reform had made me all too aware that, in the not-too-far-off-future, Social Security and Medicare would face demands in the trillions of dollars as the baby-boom generation aged.  There was no practical way to pay those obligations in advance.  The most effective policy would be to pay down the debt, creating in the process additional savings, which in turn could increase the nations productive capacity and federal revenues at existing tax rates by the time the boomers hit retirement age."



Tags: debt  
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »