biochem wrote:Nico wrote:http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2016/03/gop-must-answer-for-what-it-did-to-kansas.html
I would like to see a GOP-supporter's response to the content of the article I linked,
Kansas - The article references Kansas's economic theory - the classic slash taxes get government out of the way and the economy will soar model. And the article as is typical for left wing media showcases the downsides of the governmental budget cut portion of the plan. As is would be expected the WSJ showcases what upsides are measurable to date.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/seeded-with ... 1431729743
Left and right are both cherry picking statistics to fit their world view.
For my personal opinion: The changes were put in place during the 2010-13 time period. So they've basically be in place for about 3 years. At this point I'm with the too soon to tell crowd. The theory is that the tax cuts and other business friendly measures will attract new businesses to Kansas and inspire Kansas residents to start their own businesses or expand existing ones. Well the truth is that starting new businesses, attracting businesses movement etc takes time and one shouldn't expect to see a lot of economic growth in a 3 year time period (no matter how much the cheerleaders promise immediate gratification). But one would expect to see immediate pain. I really think that this needs to be evaluated at 10 years out not at 3 years.
My best crystal ball guess for a 10 year reading: Economic growth will improve but not nearly as much as the cheerleaders hope. The budget cut pain will be reduced as alternative solutions are found. However this may actually be too far. I tend to be a big proponent of the "too much of anything" is bad theory and there is a genuine possibility that this plan is too much. Therefore I love the fact it was tried at the state level not the Federal one. I like trying these sorts of ideas as small scale before trying to scale up.
Lousiana - Louisiana isn't the best test case. Hurricane Katrina wrecked the state and that sort of damage can be long term (draconian population reduction as residents who fled don't come back, industries who try and fail to recover and then close etc etc). So a lot of the economic moves were really desperation moves, bribes to keep industry etc in the state.
The economic desperation moves didn't really work that well, the article is correct there. And since most of them occurred earlier than in Kansas there has been more time to evaluate their efficacy.
On the other hand the education desperation moves (ignored by the article's cherry picking) did work. After the hurricane wrecked the New Orleans school system, they switched by necessity to charter schools. Educational achievement (K-12) has soared ever since.
So Louisiana is a mixed bag. Some of their post hurricane desperation moves worked, some didn't.
Then there is some anti-Republican rhetoric about how the tax plans they are promising are unrealistic. Politicians promising exaggerated claims. To quote Casablana "I'm shocked shocked that gambling is going on in Rick's."
Basically the big problem is that neither party's economic plans are working. We desperately need some new ideas on how to fix the economy. The Republican solution to everything is cut taxes. The Democratic solution to everything is more welfare of various sorts. Neither seems to work the way it's proponents hope. So back to the title of the thread. "How do we fix the economy?" There are about 11 pages of ideas here. Some of them similar to portions of ideas presented by politicians some quite different. What are your thoughts on the various proposals Nico?
Dream on: Dream on: A large day dream is that all economists and politicians must account for how their ideas work in reality.
Someone or other wrote an SF story where a society had the lawmakers required to post, with amy law, the expected results, and their weighting of future votes depended on how close they were to reality. Dream on
It is certainly a good process to try things on a pilot scale before going into full production. It is also good to move slowly as often, something can produce short term advantages and long term disasters. Look at a history of about a generation for higher reliability. However, this requires a national government that allows real freedom at lower levels for experiments, which sociopaths do not like.