| sgtclub |
02-05-2005 08:13 PM |
Quote:
Originally posted by Sidd Finch
I have no idea what you are asking me. I know that as the supply of cummerbunds goes up, the demand for zabaglione comes down. Or something like that -- Microeconomics was a long, long time ago.
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Here's the way I look at it. On day 1, additional amounts will come into the market, and this should cause holdings to appreciate, because we have more dollars chasing proportionately less investment options. As you correctly point out, that benefits those that hold investments prior to the inflow, which, by the way, is roughtly 60% of the country. It is not just the rich that are invested.
You posit that those who are invested pre-inflow will sell to capture gains, and that may be the case, but I'm not convinced. Assuming that they do, the result is that stock prices should fall, because there is more available inventory. OK, fine. But there is also another inflow coming in the next month (or other period), which means that the new money should be able to take advantage of the lower (i.e., lower than the initial spike) prices. So where is the harm?
Quote:
What I'm saying is this: The net effect will be that the people who benefit most from the "wealth creation" effect are the people who are already wealthy. I.e., the people who have money in the market now, before we start pumping in a $30 billion a month of formerly-SS money. Meanwhile, that new money will have less purchasing power in an inflated stock market, making the investments less valuable and, ultimately, more risky.
So, we are putting the safety net at risk, and putting the government another few trillion into debt, and risking a significant rise in interest rates.... in order to benefit most the people who need it least. Can you say "wealth transfer"?
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60% of the country is already invested in the market, so it is not just the wealthy who benefit. And why do you believe the risk profile is increased?
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And yes, I think the White House understands this. And yes, I think that making wealthy people wealthier is one reason for the push -- but not the main reason. The main reason behind the push to fundamentally change Social Security is ideological; it's the "ownership society" theory, with a spice of distaste for a New Deal program that has worked so effectively for so long.
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I don't agree that the WH wants to undue SS, but I do agree that they want a phiolosphical shift to less reliance on the government.
efs/eft
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