Bad Debt Management Can Destroy Credit and Finances
Bad debt management habits can be hard to cure. Do you need help?
I Am Being Sued for Credit Card Debt, Should I Hire a Lawyer?
Legal action is a serious threat to your financial stability. Lawyer or no lawyer, you must defend yourself.
Credit checks help creditors decide if you can be trusted
Credit bureaus are devoted to collecting information all about your credit history, and they share it with companies that might lend to you. You, too, can access the credit information that appears when creditors do a credit check.
Debt-Relief Grants: Facts in the Fiction
Federally funded grants that can be applied toward alleviating consumer debt is as real as the leprechaun sighted in Mobile, Alabama in 2006.
The Services of a Debt Management Corporation
Debt management corporations can provide vital advice to those attempting to eliminate debt, but the value of such assistance is greatly affected by the reputability of the corporation.
Why Was your Car Loan Denied?
Did a lender squash your dreams of owning your own wheels? Now they have to tell you why they said "no."
Credit Repair Companies
Charging for credit repair prior to providing services is illegal.
The Risks and Rewards of Consumer Debt Settlement
An 25% to 80% decrease in outstanding debts? Sound like a dream? Not exactly. Debt negotiation programs carry a wide array of risks that debt settlement companies rarely inform you of.
Getting Help when Debt Consolidation Options are Few
Your choices depend on your situation. What options do you have?
Is an Instant Loan right for you?
If you need a few quick hundred dollars, an instant loan may be right for you. 
We’re here to help you!
Our counselors are available weekdays
from 8:30 am to 7:00 pm EST.

get_help_btn.gif
 

Geithner Versus Unemployment

By Chris Buchheit on April 18, 2010

Within the last few months, there have been big wigs talking about how much the economy seems to be improving. However, is this politics or true economic expansion?

According to a news story from the Associated Press, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, the economy is growing much faster than expected. Even though, unemployment remains around ten percent, he claims that the economy is improving more quickly that initially thought.

This statement to me seems troublesome. During the last quarter, most of America’s GDP was driven strictly by government spending. Growth was almost exclusively in the public sector. This, to me, is not a sustainable model for growth. However, if Secretary Treasurer Geithner believes the economy is growing, where are the jobs? If the private sector is expanding, why is unemployment still as high as it is?

The way to sustained job growth is by real tax cuts on small businesses. If business owners have the money to hire more employees, they will. However, the government still feels it necessary to tax that very demographic. As I described in another blog, the recently passed Health Care Reform bill will tax individuals who make $200,000 or greater per year and couples who make more than $250,000. Back in 2006, the average income for small business owners was $233,600, as I cited in the same blog entry. So clearly small businesses are indirectly being taxed by the health care bill. In the long run, how can this series of spending and taxing by the government be sustained?

However, on the other side of things, according to the same article, consumer confidence is up, and people are spending more money. If this is true, then there is more money circulating within the economy. This is indeed a good sign.

If, though, the economic growth is coming from the public sector, it is not a true sign of real growth – just the government throwing money at a problem. If the economy were improving as drastically as the pundits like to tout, jobs would be increasingly present. Even if all the other numbers were going where they need to be going, at the end of the day, almost one in ten people in the country are out of a job.
Posted: 4/18/2010 9:03:08 PM by Alan Greenspent | with 0 comments


Trackback URL: http://www.debtorsunite.com/trackback/336187b0-fcf5-4f5a-8e10-025bf21cc6f7/Geithner-Versus-Unemployment.aspx

Comments
Blog post currently doesn't have any comments.
Leave comment



Enter security code:
 Security code