Re: Do you blame Bush?
I do think there is equal blame for each party. I'd still like to (purely partisanly) stand behind Obama.....because I think he has been on the regulation/raise taxes war path since he started campaigning. The pendulum is swinging back after my entire lifetime of deregulation.
Regulation for industry is an unpopular position. As long as the American people were convinced that deregulation/getting government out of the way/free-r markets made our economy stronger, there was no counter weight to that argument that would allow for controls. Now that we've seen the downside, there is a counterweight.....maybe, just MAYBE we can get an appropriate level of regulation/oversight for the system. I'm heartened that everyone (Republican and Democrats) have found a common enemy to fight. I just hope there are some smart economists in there looking this over. It makes me wish that people campaigned more on skill sets than on "character". We've got soooo many lawyers in there - maybe we need some economists too! (I do like Romney even though he's a stinky Republican. I'd love to see his opinions on this mess.)
I'd just like to add that I heard George Soros speak a few months ago and he made a point that has stuck with me. He said that everyone treats economic markets like biological systems. Like water in two vessels allowed to mingle, we have this faith that nature/physics will bring the system to equilibrium. Supply/demand......it all ballances out. BUT - we've made a huge error in assumption there. Economics are not biological. There is no grand design beyond our understanding that will save us if we go astray. Equilibrium is not a given. Sometimes, you have to step in. Free markets have never sounded the same to me. A bit of regulation is a good thing to steer the ship and it would be nice if we could introduce some ethical behavior to balance out the insane greed. That's too much to ask, though.
I do think there is equal blame for each party. I'd still like to (purely partisanly) stand behind Obama.....because I think he has been on the regulation/raise taxes war path since he started campaigning. The pendulum is swinging back after my entire lifetime of deregulation.
Regulation for industry is an unpopular position. As long as the American people were convinced that deregulation/getting government out of the way/free-r markets made our economy stronger, there was no counter weight to that argument that would allow for controls. Now that we've seen the downside, there is a counterweight.....maybe, just MAYBE we can get an appropriate level of regulation/oversight for the system. I'm heartened that everyone (Republican and Democrats) have found a common enemy to fight. I just hope there are some smart economists in there looking this over. It makes me wish that people campaigned more on skill sets than on "character". We've got soooo many lawyers in there - maybe we need some economists too! (I do like Romney even though he's a stinky Republican. I'd love to see his opinions on this mess.)
I'd just like to add that I heard George Soros speak a few months ago and he made a point that has stuck with me. He said that everyone treats economic markets like biological systems. Like water in two vessels allowed to mingle, we have this faith that nature/physics will bring the system to equilibrium. Supply/demand......it all ballances out. BUT - we've made a huge error in assumption there. Economics are not biological. There is no grand design beyond our understanding that will save us if we go astray. Equilibrium is not a given. Sometimes, you have to step in. Free markets have never sounded the same to me. A bit of regulation is a good thing to steer the ship and it would be nice if we could introduce some ethical behavior to balance out the insane greed. That's too much to ask, though.
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