On the surface it's good.
Then....look at how it's implemented: education has become a business
Private schools
public schools raising tuition to astronomical amounts knowing the federal govt (FAFSA) will increase the borrowing ceiling/limit.
FAFSA increases the lending ceiling because Unis raised tuition so much. "They are here to help."
Uni raises tuition ---> FAFSA raises lending limit ---> Unis raise tuition....and so on.
And what is the quality of all of these "colleges?"
I started a thread on this. It's in Domestic, if anyone wants to read it and/or bump it.
............
Tax funded equal high quality education should be a human right everywhere, quality education is like location for property dealers, the mantra should be education education education, not just book skills but also broad social skills and knowledge about the world we live in, in every Country where the education system is broken, low quality or just for the select few you invariably have huge social problems and high crime. The importance of good teachers and schools can not be stressed enough it is simply alfa and omega for creating a good Democratic modern well functioning society with mostly happy and content citizens.
And that's a fact![]()
^ Excellent view which I fully endorse.
only 80K jobs added last month.
but here's romney talking about turning around an economy:
^ That's good! Should be an Obama ad.
One thing that I cannot stand is Presidential politicians running for office or actually in office, pretending they can control and even affect the economy.
In certain sectors yes, under specific circumstances.
All this talk about the "economy" and "jobs" is just catering to the dumb. Lots of dumb voters.
The dummy vote.
Interesting, that while this nfp was disappointing, in moments, and during following hour, eurusd still fell like a stone (=euro lost value against US dollar) - US dollar is still much better option for investors than euro.
Now just before this weekend euro fell to lowest in some 23 or 24 years against AUS (could check that on terminal but too tired) (euro back that time was math DM). Now many board members were not even born then! 4 year low to GBP. Can you smell the wind of change.
Although this spoof is of a US "benefits" programme the EU has similar "benefits" schemes.
!
The $1 Trillion in total debt and the high per capita debt of million of recent graduates with BA/BS and Master's programs is having a ripple effect on the US economy. Master's degree and living at home with your parents at the age of 38. And deferring the loans for three years. These loans cannot be discharged in any way (e.g. bankruptcy) (I'm not saying they should be). But millions are up the creek without a paddle.
Update here:
And then there is the omnipresent Head in the sand syndrome.Indentured Students Rise As Loans Corrode College Ticket
By Janet Lorin - Jul 9, 2012
Geraldine Damiani Brezler took out a $5,000 student loan in the late 1960s to study at the State University of New York. She became a nurse, got married, bought a house and repaid the debt in less than three years.
Today, her son, David, 38, owes about $85,000 in loans for a master’s degree in education at New York University. He can’t find full-time work, lives with his parents in White Plains, New York, and has deferred paying his debt for three years.
Student-loan programs established by Congress to help students access higher education have swelled to $1 trillion in debt, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Bloomberg's Janet Lorin reports. (Source: Bloomberg)
Geraldine Damiani Brezler took out a $5,000 student loan in the late 1960s and paid it off in three years. Her 38-year-old son David has had a very different experience paying back his student loans.
Don't deal with these big problems. Put a temporary band-aid on them.
Link: the same as above.Republicans and Democrats alike postponed a reckoning. They encouraged borrowing and ignored surging tuition, leaving loans to balloon to the size of mortgages, shocking even the system’s own architects.
555555555 Sure, tax-funded EVERYTHING. BS, IMHO, Larv. That leads to crony capitalism,union fixing, fake funding and quotas -- you know, kids with no brains get places at unis just cause they're ethnic. Pfft, same as govt positions where "stupid" ethnic folks get jobs just cause the govt has to fill the ethnic quota.
Unions run public schools and they decide curricula, methods, etc. Turn out libbie kids who figure welfare is better than a job. Nothing is a right unless you work for it. The world needs a war to set things right. I reckon the next will be religious-based:and guess what, the muslims won't take prisoners. They will torture worse than the Japanese and Germans ever did.
This is worthy of posting. Applicable to the US but also Europe and the rest of the world.
Entire: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-credi...6--sector.htmlAnalysis: From a credit swamp, recovery horizons lengthenBy Mike Dolan | Reuters
…
LONDON (Reuters) - If it feels as though efforts to revive the world economy are continually running into the mire, that's partly because policymakers are still trying to map the extent of the credit swamp.
Five years to the month since the credit bubble popped, one of the striking aspects of the recurrent gloom invading households, businesses and investors is how the horizon for sustainable recovery is being pushed years into the distance.
Bank of England governor Mervyn King, who last month said the world was barely half way through this crisis, now speaks with almost biblical foreboding of the big "black cloud" of uncertainty hanging over the world.
Come on, try harder. Corporations are duty-bound to do what they can for their shareholders, including break the law:
America's Falling Corruption Rankings
In 2001, Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index ranked the United States as the 16th least-corrupt country. By last year, the nation had fallen to 24th place. The World Bank also reports a weakening of corruption controls in the United States since the late 1990s, so that it is falling behind most other developed nations.
“You can lead a horticulture but you can’t make her think.” Dorothy Parker
there are many euro "whales" about see ICB for starters
Central bank pledges financial push in Africa|Business|chinadaily.com.cn
China is to promote the yuan's use in settling trade and investment with Africa, and encourage the more active development of Chinese financial institutions across the continent, a senior central bank official said on Friday.
Li Dongrong, assistant governor of the People's Bank of China, said Africa has the capability of becoming a new hub of international capital flow, and the yuan's use there should be further improved in accordance with rising demand for the currency there.
"We will continue to encourage domestic financial institutions to increase their presence and business across the continent," Li told delegates at the Forum on China-Africa Financial Cooperation in Beijing, adding that the cooperation potential between the two sides is huge, as Africa's economy continues to take off.
According to Li, yuan-denominated settlement between China and some African countries has already started, with 4.3 billion yuan ($156.5 million) worth of settlement made with South Africa and 2.3 trillion yuan with Mauritius, for example.
The popularity of using the yuan has been increasing in Africa, and more central banks are considering including the currency in their reserve portfolios, reported various governors of African central banks at the forum.
Millison Narh, second deputy governor of the Bank of Ghana, said the bank's board of directors has decided to use the yuan as part of its settlement and reserve currencies in January, but has yet to finalise details with the People's Bank of China
"We have looked at the currency rate risk management of the reserve portfolio. I think the yuan has performed very well, supported by the huge international reserves of China. It makes sense to use the yuan as both the settlement currency and the reserve currency."
More African central banks will make similar decisions, and in five years about 20 percent of African central banks' foreign reserve portfolio would be yuan assets, he said.
Use of the yuan remained "quite limited" in Africa, he said, and cautioned some of the recent use of it has been due to the global economic crisis. Any sudden rebound in European economies as well as in the United States would negatively affect wider use of the Chinese currency across Africa as central banks would prefer to hold more euros and dollars as their exchange rates gain strength. Michael Gondwe, governor of the Bank of Zambia, added that his country is yet to decide on including the yuan in its foreign reserve assets, but it is expecting increased usage of it to settle trade between China and Zambia.
Franklin Kennedy, a non-executive director of the African Export-Import Bank, said he believed using the yuan on the continent was "a natural evolvement - it has to happen", and expects more African central banks to include the currency in their foreign reserve portfolios.
But some African traders seemed much less optimistic about using the yuan to settle transactions or hold the currency. One trade finance manager at Societe Generale (China) Ltd, who declined to be named, said he has seen little demand among traders to settle deals in yuan, because there is no sound channel to make investment or purchases in yuan after holding the currency.
Akin Olusuyi, managing director and chief executive officer at Nigeria-based Cocoa Products (Ile-Oluji) Ltd, which traded $20 million last year, added that he "wouldn't consider settling transactions with Chinese importers in yuan because as manufacturer we need to import most materials using dollars, a well-recognized international trade currency". Babacar Ndiaye, the former president of the African Development Bank, said he saw "no reason" why traders would refuse to settle transactions in yuan "when the trade flow increases" between China and Africa. "It is logical that very soon more and more central banks of Africa will follow Nigeria to include the yuan into their reserves," he said He added at present it is just the beginning, and central banks would also prefer to buy treasury bonds from China in the future if possible.
A tray full of GOLD is not worth a moment in time.
Listened to an interview with Jeff Faux on the Diane Rehm Show. Pretty much nails it:
Jeff Faux: "The Servant Economy" | The Diane Rehm Show from WAMU and NPR
Jeff Faux of the Economic Policy Institute argues Americans are in denial. Everyone knows, he says, but no one faces up to the fact that the United States can no longer afford to have subsidized unregulated markets, be the world’s global power and provide a steadily rising standard of living. One of these is possible, maybe two, but not all three, according to Faux. No group -- and certainly no politician of either party -- is addressing this new reality, he contends. Despite public posturing to the contrary, it’s America's middle class that will be sacrificed on this current path. Please join us for a conversation with Jeff Faux on why he believes we’re moving from a service to a servant economy.
---
Does this look like the Strongest Economy in the world? How about Mediocre? No, not even mediocre. Just plain bad.
Analysis: In the U.S. housing market, recovery or Lost Decade? | Reuters(Reuters) - The worst U.S. housing crisis since the Great Depression has been declared over. But is it?
July 18, 2012
What some of Wall Street's forecasts for a recovery may be underestimating are tectonic shifts in the U.S. economy that make the housing market a different place from a decade ago.
Record levels of student debt, 15 years of flat incomes and the fact that nearly half of homeowners are effectively stranded in their houses look likely to weigh on prices into the indefinite future.
Several housing experts have said the market is in danger of drifting for years. In a bleaker scenario, the fragile U.S. economic recovery could slip back into recession if Europe's crisis deepens or the political impasse in Washington triggers a new budget crisis, putting the housing market at risk again.
"We've gone through half of a lost decade since the crisis started in 2007," said Robert Shiller, co-founder of the Case-Shiller U.S. housing price index and an economics professor at Yale University.
The so-called Lost Decade in Japan occurred after the speculative bubble in the 1980s, when abnormally low interest rates fueled soaring property values. The ensuing crash has continued to afflict the Japanese economy ever since.
^It's far from over. Who do they think they are fooling? And until it is over, and the construction jobs come back and people can foolishly borrow against illusory home values, the economy won't rebound high enough to crash again. It's all we have left, this smoke-and-mirrors economy. Feeding off of the corpse of the once great nation. Big finance thinks it's at the apex, but actually it's a bottom-feeder. Lots of big fish down there at the bottom.
The part in bold will not happen again, IMO. At least not for some decades.
There has been recent talk of tightening of credit not only in the US but worldwide.
Confidence is very important and people do not have it. The term I use is "unease." People are uneasy.
As stated, incomes are flat. Americans on average are now making the same incomes as in 1997.
As for housing - for generation, X, Y, and the Millennials, we/they are paying for a place to live when you take out a 30-year mortgage loan.
Yup. Sounds like the strongest economy in the world. I know some people who've done this. First, you go into cash savings. Then, the 401K. Finally, you start selling stuff.
Entire: Retirement savings raided by 35% of laid-off workersRetirement savings raided by 35% of laid-off workers
By Christine Dugas, USA TODAY
July 19, 2012
The number of displaced workers has risen dramatically since the start of the Great Recession, and this year a third of them had to raid retirement savings to make ends meet.
Making matters worse, many who have lost their jobs have defaulted on 401(k) loans, causing taxes and penalties to further deplete their retirement savings.
"Of greatest concern are those who are in their 40s and 50s," says Catherine Collinson, president of Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies, which released a study today on the retirement outlook of the unemployed and underemployed.
But we don't want no big gummint:
WAPO Runs Another Piece About Defense Contractors Unhappy About Being Thrown Off Welfare | Beat the Press
Apparently military contractors hold an especially warm place in the hearts of the Washington Post editors. How else can one explain another story devoted to the fact that they will lose money and reduce employment if the military cuts slated to go into effect in January actually occur.
Some folks may recall a major news article the paper ran last month that was devoted to a study commissioned by military contractors that hyped the job loss that would result from these cuts. Of course in a downturn like the present one, any cuts in government spending will cost jobs.
The logic is fairly simple, the government spending is hiring people, both directly and indirectly. It hires people directly because workers are being paid to teach, build roads, or build bombers. It hires people indirectly because these workers will then spend most of their pay at grocery stores, restaurants and other places where their spending will help to employ people.
If the economy were close to full employment then government spending could be seen as crowding out private spending, primarily by raising interest rate. However, we are not close to full employment, so cuts in government spending will cost jobs. It is that simple.
So just keep saying that until its clear: cuts in government spending (military or otherwise) cost jobs. Don't waste anyone's time talking about the budget and the economy until you understand this point. And when you do, please tell the WAPO to stop highlighting the whining of military contractors who seem to think the government owes them contracts.
Give 'em enough rope. . .since our politicians are in the banksters' pockets, the only hope we have is that they will destroy themselves. Nobody cares that financial services industry has been ripping off and destroying the lives of the people it "serves," but now it seems they have been stealing from each (big surprise that). Maybe LIBOR will spark some truly creative destruction: Feeding Frenzy Seen If Wall Street Sues Itself Over Libor - Bloomberg
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)