Another fun chart. Everyone is hyperventilating about the pink (which is not a problem). You have to look in very specific places to hear anything about the grey (which is still a problem).
Another fine legacy for the Bush admin -letting financial industry make their own laws. Interestingly a business can bo broke, and it's owners can stay as wealthy and republican as ever.
longhornbaseball wrote:Another fun chart. Everyone is hyperventilating about the pink (which is not a problem). You have to look in very specific places to hear anything about the grey (which is still a problem).
How much of that liability is tied to the housing market?
There have been some interesting ideas on getting the real estate market back in order. Mayor Bloomberg has talked about an idea where you basically give citizenship to immigrants who lives in a city and stay there for a set amount of time.
That pink doesn't job with the widely-cited data that total federal debt as a percent of GDP is well above 90% and rapidly approaching 100%. What am I missing?
Hungary Jack wrote:That pink doesn't job with the widely-cited data that total federal debt as a percent of GDP is well above 90% and rapidly approaching 100%. What am I missing?
It's a little misleading, as it only goes to 2008, and the public debt ratio doesn't really jump until right after that. It's show it holding pretty steady between 60% and 70% from early 2000 on to 2008 and that matches up with most other charts I've seen.