Ray Jay wrote:It's a bold idea ... I don't see either political party supporting it. Let's put it on the shelf next to my legalize marijuana to improve productivity concept
Yeah, it'll never happen. NFP orgs are our last sacred cow. Not only do we subsidize them in whole hosts of ways, we actually reach into our own wallets and give them more at the end of the year, voluntarily. Usually to an organization with people who make many times what we do. It's kinda nuts, but people are nuts when it comes to their sacred cows.
As an eminently reasonable and intelligent Democrat,
Hold on there, I've never voted in a democratic primary and have never been so registered. Also, I notice that you consider me eminently reasonable, not eminently intelligent. So many problems with this clause . . .
do you see my point that Obama is devoid of ideas to improve the economy. He's proposed Keynesian stimulus, and not much else. I don't think stimulus will work; other do; but in the end, it won't pass in any material way, so where's his Plan B? Doesn't he owe us that as our President? Is stimulus the only thing in his tool box?
Yeah, I don't know if stimulus will work. I know Krugman is big on it, and that it should be bigger and more sustained, essentially telling the world that if the gov't is going to throw money into the economy until it gets better, it'll get better faster, because what else are you going to do? Fight the govt? I don't know if there is a Plan B, if so, it hasn't really been promoted, by anyone, has it?
Some of the more ancillary Obama ideas, like reducing foreign energy dependence and increasing manufacturing exports, are two really good long-term things which will reduce the current account balance, which is essential to long-term economic sustainability. Short-term, they won't do too much, though. Some of the ideas in this thread are OK, but fall into the "small" category. The asset sales will get excess property back on the tax rolls and productive again. Ending ethanol and many other subsidies would be great. Trade agreements are usually a good thing, but doing away with Sarbanes Oxley? Hello? Anyone remember Enron? Sure let's increase certainty by requiring less certainty from the financial statements of our publicly traded corporations.

That one is being promoted by the fox to the chickens. But unless I'm missing something, none of suggestions here are to the scale that would make an immediate, measurable short-term economic improvements.
In short, the gov't controls the money supply, and is the consumer of last resort [or uses the tax-payers as proxy through tax cuts]. Those are big things, but beyond those, what else can it do to make a really big impact on the short-term economy?