Monday , December 23 2024
Home / Mike Norman Economics / The Coronavirus Does Not Discriminate; Unfortunately Our Economic System Does — Thomas Masterson

The Coronavirus Does Not Discriminate; Unfortunately Our Economic System Does — Thomas Masterson

Summary:
Without stronger and more direct action, the fallout for the most vulnerable will be even worse and the gaps between rich and poor, whites and non-whites in the US will grow even larger. Rather than subsidies for corporations with no oversight why not help state governments fill their budget shortfalls? During the Great Recession, too little was done to help states and they responded by cutting the things that could make a difference: education and healthcare. Cutting back on these things is not just pro-cyclical, which is bad enough, it reduces the future capacity of the states to deal with the next viral pandemic (in the case of healthcare cuts), as well as reducing the growth potential of the economy. As far as transfers, rather than a one-time payment, why not monthly transfers for

Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: ,

This could be interesting, too:

NewDealdemocrat writes Coronavirus update through October 30, 2023

NewDealdemocrat writes Coronavirus update: the virus is back; everyone should return to their prior precautions and get boosted this fall

NewDealdemocrat writes BA.2 likely only causes a ripple

NewDealdemocrat writes Pessimistic and optimistic scenarios for the winter wave

Without stronger and more direct action, the fallout for the most vulnerable will be even worse and the gaps between rich and poor, whites and non-whites in the US will grow even larger. Rather than subsidies for corporations with no oversight why not help state governments fill their budget shortfalls? During the Great Recession, too little was done to help states and they responded by cutting the things that could make a difference: education and healthcare. Cutting back on these things is not just pro-cyclical, which is bad enough, it reduces the future capacity of the states to deal with the next viral pandemic (in the case of healthcare cuts), as well as reducing the growth potential of the economy. As far as transfers, rather than a one-time payment, why not monthly transfers for the duration of the crisis? There is no doubt that sending US households a cash infusion will go some way towards offsetting the reduction in the demand for goods and services. However, a one-time cash infusion will have a much lower dollar-for-dollar impact than knowing there’s money coming in regularly. In the former situation households that can are more likely to set that infusion aside in case things get even worse....
Multiplier Effect
The Coronavirus Does Not Discriminate; Unfortunately Our Economic System Does
Thomas Masterson
Mike Norman
Mike Norman is an economist and veteran trader whose career has spanned over 30 years on Wall Street. He is a former member and trader on the CME, NYMEX, COMEX and NYFE and he managed money for one of the largest hedge funds and ran a prop trading desk for Credit Suisse.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *