
by gossipgirl » Mon Oct 15, 2012 2:57 pm
by scoob » Mon Oct 15, 2012 4:18 pm
bulldogproud2 wrote:Interceptor wrote:bulldogproud2 wrote:You have to remember that it is not just the public servants there who have lost their jobs. The loss of their income has meant that they have less to spend, giving less income to other businesses, resulting in further losses of jobs. These people then also have reduced incomes, leading to less spending, more unemployment..... less spending, even more unemployment, and so the vicious cycle of Campbell Newman's Liberal policy goes.
The previous government here was massively irresponsible and incompetent in putting Qld in a difficult financial position.
They eventually "came clean" and decided on asset sales to try and recover the sinking ship.
Went down like a lead balloon with the party faithfull.
Now the LNP are having to make unpopular decisions to clean up the mess that the idiots in the ALP gave the state.
You can try and use it for all the propaganda and point scoring you like, but I doubt you really understand what you are talking about.
Interceptor, all I have done is state a very basic Economics lesson, one that every Year 11 student should be well aware of. Thanks for the insult too, I do just have a weeeeee background in Economics![]()
As for the 'irresponsible management', a lot of the spending was required to help steer Queensland through the Global Financial Crisis. Thankfully, Queensland (and Australia) got through it pretty well, compared to most other western countries.
I know that it resulted in deficit budgets and an increase in overall debts, but there are better ways of decreasing the debt and giving the economy a 'soft landing' than what Campbell Newman has done. Many would say that he has already proven to be more irresponsible and incompetent in a matter of months than the previous government was in its entirety.
Cheers
by Jimmy_041 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 4:23 pm
by scoob » Mon Oct 15, 2012 4:35 pm
by bulldogproud2 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 4:56 pm
scoob wrote:You know that you are one eyed when you defend the previous Queensland government.![]()
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by bulldogproud2 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 4:59 pm
by Jimmy_041 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 5:17 pm
bulldogproud2 wrote:southee wrote:bulldogproud2 wrote:Maybe not, but as the Prime Minister recounted the other day, there have been many many many comments made by the Leader of the Opposition degrading her and other women in positions of power.
Yes, just like Labor members degrading the females in the Liberal party.
It is not a one way street!
Okay, tell me which Labor politicians have been degrading which female Liberal politicians in Federal Parliament please.
Greens leader Christine Milne says Julia Gillard is a sexism hypocrite
SIMON BENSON
The Daily Telegraph October 15, 2012 12:00AM
GREENS Leader Christine Milne accused Julia Gillard of hypocrisy over her accusations that Tony Abbott was a misogynist, after a derogatory Twitter attack against her by a Labor senator.
Admitting the Greens had made a deliberate decision to stay out of the gender war between the government and the Coalition, Ms Milne admitted the PM undermined her own attack against Mr Abbott as being sexist last week by protecting Peter Slipper. And she warned the PM she would now be forced to stamp out sexism in her own party.
Ms Milne accused Labor senator David Feeney of a sexist and derogatory attack after he tweeted a series of pictures of the Greens leader with captions describing her different emotional states.
"If you're going to call it out you have to call out sexism on all sides, regardless of who is responsible," Ms Milne told Sky's Australian Agenda program yesterday.
Ms Milne said the debate over the past week had diminished the parliament.
"We decided we didn't want to get dragged down into it all," Ms Milne said.
by bulldogproud2 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 7:09 pm
by dedja » Mon Oct 15, 2012 7:13 pm
by Jimmy_041 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 7:51 pm
dedja wrote:true, they closest they get is the old bag jokes with Bronwyn Bishop ...
by Interceptor » Mon Oct 15, 2012 7:54 pm
bulldogproud2 wrote:Interceptor, all I have done is state a very basic Economics lesson, one that every Year 11 student should be well aware of. Thanks for the insult too, I do just have a weeeeee background in Economics![]()
As for the 'irresponsible management', a lot of the spending was required to help steer Queensland through the Global Financial Crisis. Thankfully, Queensland (and Australia) got through it pretty well, compared to most other western countries.
I know that it resulted in deficit budgets and an increase in overall debts, but there are better ways of decreasing the debt and giving the economy a 'soft landing' than what Campbell Newman has done. Many would say that he has already proven to be more irresponsible and incompetent in a matter of months than the previous government was in its entirety.
by dedja » Mon Oct 15, 2012 8:36 pm
Jimmy_041 wrote:But, I'm not sure where's she's going with the photo....![]()
by dedja » Mon Oct 15, 2012 11:06 pm
by bulldogproud2 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 11:43 pm
by bulldogproud2 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 11:46 pm
by bulldogproud2 » Tue Oct 16, 2012 12:03 am
by Interceptor » Tue Oct 16, 2012 12:20 am
bulldogproud2 wrote:Re your comment that the redundancy payments would make up for the loss of income in the economy, we both know that is complete madness.
by bulldogproud2 » Tue Oct 16, 2012 8:28 am
Interceptor wrote:bulldogproud2 wrote:Re your comment that the redundancy payments would make up for the loss of income in the economy, we both know that is complete madness.
Oh please. You've completely twisted the intent of my statement and came to some sort of silly conclusion that I meant redundancy payments would have the same as keeping those folk employed. Nope, of course not. It gives them (to varying degrees) a softer landing and money to spend as they see fit.
Edit: I agree that trimming of the public service could have been done in a slower fashion.
As far as debt goes, nice attempt at deflection by comparing the Australian Federal debt compared to rest of the world.
Did you actually read the article I linked?
Qld's debt is quite dire, but you just can't seem to admit it.
You can claim it was justified due to spending on infrastructure all you like, hell anyone can dip into the big public purse and spend like a drunken sailor, Labor are great at that. What they are never too good at is knowing when to stop and consequently overstepping the mark.
by Psyber » Tue Oct 16, 2012 9:46 am
I've never been totally convinced by that economic theory.bulldogproud2 wrote:... a lot of the spending was required to help steer Queensland through the Global Financial Crisis...
Cheers
1) First you must understand that banks "print money" constantly and in huge quantities. 97% of the money supply is bank credit. We are paying interest on almost every dollar in circulation. When banks lend money, nobody's bank balance goes down. On the contrary, total bank deposits go up. This shows that banks increase the total money supply with every loan. Initially a deposit magically appears in the cheque account of the borrower. The borrower uses that newly minted credit-money to pay for a house or whatever and it duly appears in the deposits of the people who were paid from that loan. That "printed" money eventually gets destroyed - but it might take 20 or 30 years to extract and eliminate all of the credit money created by that loan. Credit money gets destroyed as loan balances are paid down. If we attempt reduce debt levels, we only starve the economy of the lifeblood it needs to support economic activity.
2) There is no difference, from an inflationary point of view, whether the flow of money into circulation is supplied by new money "printed" by private banks or by money "printed" by a Currency Issuing Sovereign Government. What matters, is that the total amount of money in circulation remains in balance with the needs of the economy. This requirement serves the social goal of maintaining a "stable" value of money. It is equally true to say that if banks are allowed to create money, it would generate hyper-inflation, unless constraint is imposed upon them.
The banks and their many allies do not want governments to rediscover their currency powers because, assuming a regime of responsible management, every dollar created by government means one less dollar created to earn interest for the banks. That is the reason for the fear mongering and exaggeration about a "slippery slope" to the Weimar Republic or to Zimbabwe.
3) If we wish to reduce debt levels but simultaneously maintain an adequate money supply for healthy economic activity, there is no option but to start replacing the huge proportion of bank-credit money (currently around 97%) with debt free-money printed by the government. Failing to act on this means that debt must keep expanding in the hope that the real economy can keep up with the built in financial Ponzi scheme. Here's a clue. The developed economies have reached the end of growth, and their old Growth Economies are threatening to collapse.
That's enough from me - let's hear from the qualified experts.
Firstly there is this site... http://era-blog.com/
Start at the bottom to get a chronological sequence of loosely related articles. This page has only a small number of articles so it does not seem daunting.
Prof Phil Lawn, of Flinders Uni, has done some good work explaining these matters. I have attached one of his PowerPoint presentations [Money, deficits, and debt.ppt] and the script which goes along with the slides [Money and deficits_3.doc].
Why not throw in the flyer promoting the event too? [Money and deficits_flyer.doc]
Much more of a Pandora's Box is Bill Mitchell's blog.
http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/? ... more-17637
by Psyber » Tue Oct 16, 2012 9:51 am
Didn't Amanda Vanstone cop a bit a few years ago?dedja wrote:true, they closest they get is the old bag jokes with Bronwyn Bishop ...
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