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Trump announces support for two-year bipartisan budget deal that boosts spending, suspends debt limit


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9 minutes ago, Greatoneshere said:

 

Umm . . . no. @Signifyin(g)Monkey and @SFLUFAN help us out, you are our only hope. They can explain everything better than I can, and know better than me on this issue anyway. 

Who cares?

 

"Balanced budgets" are fiscal garbage that no one should be proud of in any way, shape, or form.

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The lesson of the last 40 years is developed countries can have plenty of national debt without it being a major problem. There is a limit, but the United States isn't even close to it. I still favor surplus budgets during growing years and major deficits during recessions, but that sort of fiscal discipline doesn't exist.

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45 minutes ago, Massdriver said:

The lesson of the last 40 years is developed countries can have plenty of national debt without it being a major problem. There is a limit, but the United States isn't even close to it. I still favor surplus budgets during growing years and major deficits during recessions, but that sort of fiscal discipline doesn't exist.

 

A lot of our cushion on this goes away if Trump's idiotic trade wars manage to dislodge the dollar as the global reserve currency.

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39 minutes ago, Jason said:

 

A lot of our cushion on this goes away if Trump's idiotic trade wars manage to dislodge the dollar as the global reserve currency.

Well, that *is* the shortest route to ending our trade deficits.  There’s really no other way you’re ever going to have the domestic demand for dollars outstrip foreign demand for dollars.

 

So I guess at that point Trump could declare that we’re ‘winning’ again.  :silly:

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3 hours ago, Greatoneshere said:

 

Umm . . . no. @Signifyin(g)Monkey and @SFLUFAN help us out, you are our only hope. They can explain everything better than I can, and know better than me on this issue anyway. 

 

It was a combination of many factors, but the real answer is the tech boom did most of the heavy lifting by driving increased revenue, not any particular budgetary policy.

 

There were a few budgetary policy changes that played meaningful roles, notably the reduction in defense department spending by winding down the size and scope of the military post Cold War. There are a bunch of other smaller budgetary modifications that add up to a decent chunk, but nothing compared to the tech boom driving up revenues and the shrinkage of the post Cold War military apparatus.

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