How Our Economy Got This Way
This will inform you on how our economy has gotten the way it is now and what you can do as an individual to help.
Trading- Simple enough, our Exports (What we ship to others)(Sell) – our Imports (What we get from others)(Buy) if we Export (sell) more then we import (Buy) that increases our GPD making our economy better and more stable.
Do you want to learn more about Crushing Our Economy.
The Plan
The plan is to raise taxes. This will help our economy and there for us. Our future and our kids futures and theirs are at risk here. They are going to raise taxes to the rich and lower it for the middle class. This is going to slender those bank accounts that are huge and fatten up those that are small. When this money comes around it will with it raise our GPD making our economy stronger, now we need to make sure when this finally happens that we spend money and do our part to keep the wheel turning.
Does This Sample Work?
I go into a car dealer, “I want to buy a Honda please.”
“Ok, it’ll be here tomorrow”
I go home and find out that I just got fired so I call them back tomorrow and tell them I don’t want the car anymore. So the car dealer calls his travel agent.
“Hi, it’s john I have to cancel my trip because a deal fell through and I need to save my money.”
The travel agent gets this and can’t take a loan to buy a new house. The mortgage broker that was going to give him the money now doesn’t have the funds to lend out to just anyone and Joe Smith calls.
“I fired 5 employees today so I can afford that house now.”
The Broker turns around and say’s sorry but we can’t give you the loan still your to much of a risk.
Joe Smith not meaning to just hurt the economy because, all that money that was going to float around and increase our GPD is now gone. This is why we can’t make stupid decisions. We have to consider the consequences of our actions to the rest of the world; if everyone was responsible then everyone’s lives would be better. We need to think of the effects before we act. I know there’s no way Joe would have saw this coming and it’s not his fault. Now you educated on this subject so you can help us better our economy and get out of this mess.
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Post CommentWalter Holstad
On November 30, 2008 at 9:21 pm
I think you mean GDP not GPD but I like it.
ladybaby
On May 11, 2009 at 5:04 pm
That is a good write. That is how the government operates it. I wish you would click onto, “THE STORY OF STUFF” and watch the free video. It will amaze you. We have become such a consumer world, that we are killing ourselves, with poisons, and pollutions. We accumulate so much stuff, and keep buying because things are MADE to break down so people will buy more. It is a destructive merry-go-round. When I was young we could buy an appliance that would last for years. And if things broke down, people had jobs to FIX them. Now no one fixes them, we just toss them out and buy another one. It is such a WASTE. Buying more things to get the economy going is simply digging the hole deeper.
good article however, helps to make the reader understand the process going on.
Richard
On October 16, 2009 at 4:41 pm
Every Dollar You Spend
Financial planning expert Jonathan Pond has often observed that “your best dollar is the one you don’t spend”. From the point of view of securing your and your family’s futures, there could not be a more accurate statement. Every time you spend a dollar, you give up the future value of that dollar. You lose the power that comes from possessing a sum of money. You also pay a very high price: you pay the “opportunity cost” of using that dollar in a better way. An example, though quite painful, will help you to see this concept in action in a way I assure you that you will not forget.
Had you invested about $10,000 in stock of chewing gum maker William Wrigley in April, 1986, your investment would have grown to $265,000 by early 2008. You would have been receiving cash dividends of over $7,000 per year. Yes, your annual cash receipts would have been 70% of your original investment. It does not end there. Earlier this year, Warren Buffett and Nestle purchased William Wrigley, Jr. Company for $80 cash per share. Warren and Nestle would have sent you a check for $360,000. This is quite a result from a $10,000 investment in a company that was well known in 1986.
How did you spend the $10,000 you had during the mid 1980’s? On cars, clothes, lunches, dinners, trips you can’t remember, staying at overpriced hotels and renting cars? Look around your house, in the basement and in the closets. That’s what you spent it on, that is, what’s not already gone to some poor landfill. Neither Buffett nor Nestle would send you a check for any of that.
To have made the Wrigley score, you needn’t have had the $10,000 all at once. You could have bought $500 worth and made additions through Wrigley’s dividend reinvestment plan. Many great companies had them then and have them now. Wrigley stock returned 16% or more per year for all the years from 1986 through the Buffett/Nestle buyout.
You don’t lose $1 million by carelessly misplacing it. You lose it $50 and $100 at a time, buying things you don’t really want and certainly don’t really need. You lose that future $1 million (or perhaps much more) with every dollar you spend.
Sam
On March 17, 2011 at 12:20 am
If what you say, the government needs to raise taxes so they have money to spend, which will cause the economy to improve, thereby making us happy and want to spend,
then why aren’t we gitty with excitement?
They have spent 758 billion and we are worse off. How much do they need to spend to make our economy better?
You are all wet!!!!!!
Sam