Re: The Nation's Financial Condition
Posted: Fri Oct 18, 2019 5:15 pm
a real blast from the past. Arnold as well.ardilla secreta wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 5:12 pm Cullman, Alabama. Fred Ziffel is from near to there.
Same Party, Different House
https://fanlax.com/forum/
a real blast from the past. Arnold as well.ardilla secreta wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 5:12 pm Cullman, Alabama. Fred Ziffel is from near to there.
Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 5:48 pm S Corp bank that started out by cashing check out
Of the back of a fish fry in the 70s, I s**t you not.
Asset/liability management? We don’t need any of that round here, we just let it ride....
Speaking as a manufacturer, it arrived a year ago.jhu72 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 23, 2019 9:59 am 21 states have seen manufacturing job loss (year over year) so far this year. Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania are all on the list.
Missouri as well.
Sure looks like a recession in the manufacturing sector is coming or has arrived.
Query: Did you mean the Big Green losers care more for helping Vets than Trump does? Désolé...I'm an old geezer.CU88 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 21, 2019 9:00 pm These pathetic Big Green Ego losers care more about Veterans than Trump!
https://thehill.com/policy/defense/4668 ... unding-for
Why isn't Trump using specifics to get this deal done?foreverlax wrote: ↑Wed Oct 16, 2019 9:37 amGreatest trade deal in the history of our nation, which gets rid of the worst trade deal ever struck....what a joke.FOX BUSINESS: USMCA to Add $68.2B to US Economy, Spur 176K Jobs Says Key Independent Review Panel
“A new trade agreement between the U.S., Mexico and Canada would add $68.2 billion to the U.S. economy and create 176,000 new jobs, according to a study from the International Trade Commission released on Thursday. … ‘The model estimates that the agreement would likely have a positive impact on all broad industry sectors within the U.S. economy,’ the [ITC] report says. ‘Manufacturing would experience the largest percentage gains in output, exports, wages, and employment, while in absolute terms, services would experience the largest gains in output and employment.’”
U.S.-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement: Likely Impact on the U.S. Economy and on Specific Industry Sectors
And, you know, it’s very interesting: If you look at what’s happened and what’s been doing, and all the things we’ve done, and we have to get USMCA done, and they don’t want to put it up for a vote. And the Do-Nothing Democrats, they will pass it, but it has to be put up Nancy Pelosi. So let’s see what happens. But I think they’re going to put it up, because everybody —
Pence get it...THE PRESIDENT: No, everybody wants it, and I think ultimately they’re going to do the right thing. But it’s all ready to go. It’s approved by Mexico. It’s approved by Canada. It’s approved by everybody that has to be approved. We have to give it a vote. It’s been sitting for a long time. A lot of money wasted, a lot of jobs wasted. It’s going to have a tremendous impact.
Has the White House sent any actual implementing legislation to Congress to turn the deal from an agreement into law?But I’m here today because we’ve still got work to do, and we’ve got an incredible opportunity before us. Because sitting on the desk of the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives is the largest trade deal in American history. And I came to Wisconsin to say it’s time for Congress to enact the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement and pass it this year.
Tell us more!!The USMCA is, I can tell you, a state-of-the art trade agreement that will increase jobs and opportunities across Wisconsin and across America in everything from manufacturing to farming. It will protect intellectual property. It will promote innovation in business. It truly is an extraordinary agreement.
Here we go!!I mean, did you know that according to the International Trade Commission, the USMCA is going to add like $68 billion to our economy right out of the box? And, we project, conservatively, that it will create more than 175,000 new jobs.
Largest percentage of GDP since 2008, when the country was in a recession...ggait wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 3:37 pm Anything under a trillion doesn't matter!!
Federal deficit baloons to $984 billion for fiscal 2019, highest in 7 years
The U.S. Treasury on Friday said that the federal deficit for fiscal 2019 was $984 billion, a 26% increase from 2018 but still short of the $1 trillion mark previously forecast by the administration. The gap between revenues and spending was the widest it’s been in seven years as expenditures on defense, Medicare and interest payments on the national debt ballooned the shortfall.
Annual deficits have nearly doubled under President Donald Trump’s tenure notwithstanding an unemployment rate at multidecade lows and better earnings figures. Deficits usually shrink during times of economic growth as higher incomes and Wall Street profits buoy Treasury coffers, while automatic spending on items like food stamps decline.
Two big bipartisan spending bills, combined with the administration’s landmark tax cuts, however, have defied the typical trends and instead aggravated deficits. The Congressional Budget Office projects the trillion-dollar deficit could come as soon as fiscal 2020.
Trump has added more in 3 years then O-blame-a did in his final 4.RedFromMI wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 3:37 pmLargest percentage of GDP since 2008, when the country was in a recession...ggait wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 3:37 pm Anything under a trillion doesn't matter!!
Federal deficit baloons to $984 billion for fiscal 2019, highest in 7 years
The U.S. Treasury on Friday said that the federal deficit for fiscal 2019 was $984 billion, a 26% increase from 2018 but still short of the $1 trillion mark previously forecast by the administration. The gap between revenues and spending was the widest it’s been in seven years as expenditures on defense, Medicare and interest payments on the national debt ballooned the shortfall.
Annual deficits have nearly doubled under President Donald Trump’s tenure notwithstanding an unemployment rate at multidecade lows and better earnings figures. Deficits usually shrink during times of economic growth as higher incomes and Wall Street profits buoy Treasury coffers, while automatic spending on items like food stamps decline.
Two big bipartisan spending bills, combined with the administration’s landmark tax cuts, however, have defied the typical trends and instead aggravated deficits. The Congressional Budget Office projects the trillion-dollar deficit could come as soon as fiscal 2020.
It’s been great for aerospace! I have seen it first hand. Boeing can’t get out of its own way and companies down channel still booming!foreverlax wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 4:29 pmTrump has added more in 3 years then O-blame-a did in his final 4.RedFromMI wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 3:37 pmLargest percentage of GDP since 2008, when the country was in a recession...ggait wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 3:37 pm Anything under a trillion doesn't matter!!
Federal deficit baloons to $984 billion for fiscal 2019, highest in 7 years
The U.S. Treasury on Friday said that the federal deficit for fiscal 2019 was $984 billion, a 26% increase from 2018 but still short of the $1 trillion mark previously forecast by the administration. The gap between revenues and spending was the widest it’s been in seven years as expenditures on defense, Medicare and interest payments on the national debt ballooned the shortfall.
Annual deficits have nearly doubled under President Donald Trump’s tenure notwithstanding an unemployment rate at multidecade lows and better earnings figures. Deficits usually shrink during times of economic growth as higher incomes and Wall Street profits buoy Treasury coffers, while automatic spending on items like food stamps decline.
Two big bipartisan spending bills, combined with the administration’s landmark tax cuts, however, have defied the typical trends and instead aggravated deficits. The Congressional Budget Office projects the trillion-dollar deficit could come as soon as fiscal 2020.
No 3% GDP either.
Peter B - tell me again how this is the best economy in the history of our country....I already know the unemployment rate nationally and by key demographics has never been lower. Stock market matters for those who own stocks, which is less then half the population.
YTD performance of the 30 IndustrialsTypical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 4:45 pmIt’s been great for aerospace! I have seen it first hand. Boeing can’t get out of its own way and companies down channel still booming!foreverlax wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 4:29 pmTrump has added more in 3 years then O-blame-a did in his final 4.RedFromMI wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 3:37 pmLargest percentage of GDP since 2008, when the country was in a recession...ggait wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 3:37 pm Anything under a trillion doesn't matter!!
Federal deficit baloons to $984 billion for fiscal 2019, highest in 7 years
The U.S. Treasury on Friday said that the federal deficit for fiscal 2019 was $984 billion, a 26% increase from 2018 but still short of the $1 trillion mark previously forecast by the administration. The gap between revenues and spending was the widest it’s been in seven years as expenditures on defense, Medicare and interest payments on the national debt ballooned the shortfall.
Annual deficits have nearly doubled under President Donald Trump’s tenure notwithstanding an unemployment rate at multidecade lows and better earnings figures. Deficits usually shrink during times of economic growth as higher incomes and Wall Street profits buoy Treasury coffers, while automatic spending on items like food stamps decline.
Two big bipartisan spending bills, combined with the administration’s landmark tax cuts, however, have defied the typical trends and instead aggravated deficits. The Congressional Budget Office projects the trillion-dollar deficit could come as soon as fiscal 2020.
No 3% GDP either.
Peter B - tell me again how this is the best economy in the history of our country....I already know the unemployment rate nationally and by key demographics has never been lower. Stock market matters for those who own stocks, which is less then half the population.