Under the heading: Figures don’t lie, but debt-nut liars figure about student debt

Liberals wish to protect the poor from the rich. Conservatives wish to protect the rich from the poor.

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If you don’t know what you’re talking about, or if you’re outright lying, be sure to quote fake numbers or no numbers at all, as does this article from the notorious Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB).
Partial Student Debt Cancellation is Poor Economic Stimulus, June 3, 2021 Last year, we estimated that fully canceling student debt would produce eight to 23 cents of economic activity for every dollar of cost and speculated that partial student debt cancellation might have a higher multiplier. 

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In light of the current economic recovery, and employing new techniques made available by working papers from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), we find that partial cancellation of federal student loans would also be extremely poor stimulus, producing only 2 to 27 cents of economic activity for every dollar of cost.
Immediately, the acrid odor of bull excrement wafts over the land.

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There is a difference between debt “cancellation” and debt “payment.” The federal government can do both, and both of which cancel the debt.

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But federal debt “cancellation” can take dollars from the economy (depending on who the lender is and how the cancellation is handled), while federal debt payment adds dollars to the economy.

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Let’s look at four scenarios:

I. The government is the lender and the debt is canceled. 

This would add stimulus dollars to the economy, because every dollar that would have been paid to the government, now would stay in the private sector, i.e. the economy. (Federal dollars are not part of the economy until they are owned by the private sector.)

II. Government is the lender and the government pays off the debt (pays itself).

Same as I.

III. Private sector is the lender and the debt is canceled.

This neither would add nor subtract money from the economy, but it would cheat lenders while enriching borrowers.

IV. Private sector is the lender and the government pays off the debt.

This immediately adds short-term stimulus dollars to the economy, but cancels long-term dollars. There would be immediate financial benefits, while long-term interest is transformed into long-term earnings on the payment/

All four scenarios either add dollars to the economy or do not add dollars, but none subtracts dollars.

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These scenarios can be boiled down to one simple financial question: Would you prefer that the federal government adds growth dollars to the economy, or merely circulates existing dollars within the economy?

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In short, would you prefer that the economy grow or remain level? As we shall see, the immediate money supply is not the entire issue.
Specifically, we find: Canceling $10,000 of debt results in an economic multiplier of 0.13x in our central estimate, with a range of 0.03x to 0.27x depending on the parameters.Your Power is in Seeing Your Lack | by Ruth Ann Rose | Medium
Before we shovel too much of the bull excrement, we call your attention to the little word “an” that we bolded in their article (above).

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They used the word “an” rather than “the,” because there are infinitely many economic multipliers.

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According to Investopedia: “In economics, a multiplier broadly refers to an economic factor that, when increased or changed, causes increases or changes in many other related economic variables.” And bless their little hearts, the CRFB flips back, forth, and around and around about exactly which multiplier they are talking about. For example, consider the multiplier: GDP/Federal Deficit Spending. The formula for GDP is;

GDP = Federal Spending + Non-federal Spending + Net Exports.

Any of the three terms on the right side of the equation can be considered an economic multiplier with respect to GDP. Increase any of the last three terms in the equation, and GDP must rise.

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In straight algebra, you would say that GDP must rise by the same amount as each one of the terms rises. In the above four scenarios, none indicate an increase in federal spending would cause a reduction in GDP.

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But economics contains multipliers, that if the CRFB were honest (!), are impossible to measure. For instance, consider these questions.

How many additional dollars would be created by federal investments in Research and Development? How many additional dollars would be created by private investments in R&D?

These two simple questions are massively complex and are impossible to answer. They involve factors such as:
  1. Which R&D specifically
  2. The likely success rates of the R&D
  3. How much success
  4. The timing of successes
  5. The collateral results
  6. The effect on the other factors
Or, take just one tiny segment of R&D. What if the federal government and the private sector invested $1 billion in battery research. What will be the effects on GDP? That’s just one minuscule slice of the problem.

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Now multiply that by the hundreds of thousands of different investments the private sector could possibly make, with the extra dollars received via loan payoff or loan cancellation. Then compute the multiplier. Can you do that? Can anyone do it? The CRFB can, or rather, pretends it can:
Partial cancellation of student debt would increase economic output in the coming years, but only by a small fraction of the overall cost. Canceling $10,000 of student debt per borrower would completely eliminate student debt for 15 million borrowers and partially reduce debt for 28 million more at a cost of between $210 billion and $280 billion.

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We estimate this would reduce annual loan payments by around $18 billion per year (once current automatic forbearance ends), or roughly $54 billion over three years. This means that even over a three-year period, less than a fifth of the total amount forgiven would translate into cash savings.
First, remember that every dollar the Monetarily Sovereign federal government invests is free. No tax dollars are used.  The private sector pays nothing for federal spending. So even if the government found a way to spend a trillion dollars that, by some magical mathematics, translated into only an extra $1 for the private sector, the economy would be ahead of the game.

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And then, why the three-year comparison? What about over a ten-year period. A twenty-year period? The CRFB “cooks the books” by comparing a long-term liability to a short-term return. Given the CRFB’s dumb business logic, no one ever would invest in R&D, because almost none of it pays off in three years. And now the CRFB’s diarrhetic bull really unloads:
Based on existing literature, we estimate these cash savings plus the added wealth from student debt cancellation would lead to $36 billion in increased consumption, resulting in roughly $31 billion in higher output over three years. The net fiscal multiplier in this case would be roughly 0.13x. Employing a broader range of assumptions, this multiplier could be as low as 0.03x and as high as 0.27x.

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Canceling $50,000 would wipe out all student debt for around 36 million borrowers and reduce debt for 7 million more at a cost of $950 billion based on our estimates. This would reduce annual payments by $55 billion per year and $165 billion over three years.

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In our central estimate, we find the resulting increased cash flow and wealth would increase consumption by roughly $104 billion, resulting in roughly $91 billion in added output over three years. The net fiscal multiplier would total 0.10x.
“Based on existing literature”? Make that “based on cherry-picking something someone wrote, that supports our case.” The CRFB has no clue about how much previously indebted students will spend, and how they will spend it, when partly or fully relieved of their debt.

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Consider the student who can’t afford to start a business because of his debt, but now relieved of that debt he is able to start the next Costco or McDonalds. How does that figure into CRFB’s phony math?
Employing a broader range of assumptions, this multiplier could be as low as 0.02x and as high as 0.25x. These multipliers are extremely low. Even during periods of extreme social distancing, CBO estimated most COVID relief measures had a multiplier of between 0.4x and 0.9x.
Wait! What? Now you use “a broader range of multipliers”? What does that say about your “narrower” range of multipliers? How did you pick those multipliers?

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The CRFB arbitrarily picks multipliers from the infinite number available, and then estimates from those multipliers, just to get the answer it wants. Is the CRFB now “proving” that getting us out of the COVID recession was not worth the federal investment? And now we move from bull-scat to a herd of bull’s-scat.Feral cattle terrorize hikers and devour native plants in a California national monument - Los Angeles Times
Historically, multipliers on most stimulus policies have ranged from 0.5x to 2.0x.
Which multipliers? The narrow ones or the wide ones? Over what period of time? It’s all vague — intentionally vague.
The multipliers for partial student debt cancellation are low for three main reasons. First, partial cancellation boosts household cash flow very modestly relative to the cost.
Yes, if you pay off a 20-year loan, and then measure the 3-year savings, that is exactly the way it turns out. By that phony criterion, no long-term loan ever should be paid off.
Second, the benefits are poorly targeted to those who are less likely to spend any additional cash they receive.
All that says is, they’ll save it for future investment in the economy, which apparently the CRFB considers worthless.
And third, the combination of a strong economic recovery, excessive cash, and supply constraints in the current economy suggests limited room to further boost demand.
This has been the CRFB mantra for ages: “There is no more room for GDP growth.” A truly pitiful conclusion designed to keep the lower income group from asking for government benefits.
The CRFB’s ongoing mantra: “There’s no more room for economic growth.”
As we highlighted in last year’s analysis on full student debt cancellation, forgiving large amounts of this type of debt results in only modest reductions to annual repayment costs and thus frees up only a small amount of additional funds to be used for consumption in the short run.
Oops. They sneaked in that little phrase, “in the short run.” As in, “Never invest in anything that does not pay you back fully within three years. Never buy a stock. Never buy a bond. Never buy a business.” And the above is what passes for financial sense in the world of the CRFB.
Student debt is generally repaid gradually over a 10-to-30-year period. In fact, the majority of canceled debt would result in no improvement in cash flow this year.
Hmmm . . . Let’s do some CRFB-style calculations:.

Say I buy a house for $1,100,000, put down $100,000, and mortgage $1 million for 30 years at 5%.

Not counting taxes and other costs, that mortgage will cost me $64,418.64 a year — or using the CRFB’s three-year criterion, $193,255.92 for three years.

Over the full 30 years of the mortgage, I will pay $932,559 in interest.

If instead, I decide to pay cash for the house, rather than mortgage, I will pay an extra $1 million, and save “only” $193,255.92 for three years.

According to CRFB math, I will “lose” $806,744 in the first three years.

My cash flow in the first year will be a negative $935,536.

So, the CRFB:
  1. Ignores the fact that federal spending costs no one anything
  2. Claims one never should pay off any loan unless they net profit in three years, or even in one year.
  3. Relies on vague, optional estimates based on vague, optional, and ever-changing “multipliers.”
All of this is to “prove” that it is better for America that college students — especially those who don’t come from wealthy families — be indebted for life, thereby prevented from investing in lucrative careers.

The South kept black slaves from getting an education for the very same reason. 

But it is how liars figure.
Almost 90 percent of IDR borrowers have balances above $10,000 and around 40 percent have balances over $50,000.
Now suddenly, the CRFB seems to be criticizing the small size of the payoff! Hey guys, make up your minds.
According to an analysis by Sylvain Catherine and Constantine Yannelis, which shows that the top income decile receives more benefit than the bottom 30 percent of earners.
Obviously. If you eliminate almost any tax or any cost in America, the high income people will receive more dollar benefit. But that isn’t the point.

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A $10,000 savings means more to a low earner than to a high earner. It will have a greater effect on the low earner’s life, on his ability and willingness to spend, and on the economy. Sadly, there is no noncontroversial way to do this correctly. One might want to give low-income people more of the school loan benefit, or pay off less of high-income people’s loans, but there are many reasons that never has seems to work.

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The U.S. tax code tries but fails.
Given high levels of savings, massive stimulus in the pipeline, pent-up demand, supply constraints, inflation pressures, and expectations of a strong economic recovery, additional cash injected into the economy will have few places to go. To the extent that it leads to new spending – as opposed to saving – it is likely to result in additional inflation pressures (especially in the near term), which risks higher interest rates (especially once the economy has fully recovered) and thus tamped-down growth.
When it suits their purpose, CRFB becomes fixated on the near term.

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We might have inflation for a couple of months, at which point the CRFB will set their hair on fire, and subsequently ignore the welfare of the people. But inflation never is caused by federal deficits. It always is caused by shortages. And the federal government can cure any shortages by additional federal spending to obtain the scarce goods or to reward their creation.
When the economy is well below potential and the Federal Reserve is constrained, CBO estimates each dollar of demand leads to about $1.50 of ultimate output. But when the economy is near potential and the Fed is able to respond, CBO believes $1 of demand will produce only 50 cents of net output.
Not choosing to understand economics, the CBO and the CRFB won’t tell you that even if $1 in demand produced only 2 cents in net output, it still would be worth it, because the $1 in demand cost no one anything. And so far as the economy being “near potential,” that is as bogus a figure as is the “economic multiplier.

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Economic potential the total ability of a nation to produce goods and services. It is a corollary to GDP, which a total spending number. The latter is history. The former is predicted. What is the total capacity of the U.S. to produce goods and services? No one knows because capacity not only includes the availability of production assets but also changes in methodology due to automation and many other factors.
While there is no doubt that student debt cancellation would be a financial and psychological benefit to many borrowers who would receive forgiveness, canceling $10,000 or $50,000 in student debt would not be an effective stimulus.
Huh? Something that not only is a financial benefit, but also a psychological benefit, is not an effective stimulus??? Was that part of the “let the poor suffer,” conservative playbook?

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And now, for the best part, which conveniently is hidden in the Appendix:
Appendix: Uncertainty in Estimates Our estimates come with a significant degree of uncertainty.
Translation: “Our estimates are WAGs (Wild Ass Guesses) designed to scare you.
The ranges (in our) estimates reflect uncertainty over three components: the budgetary cost of forgiving the loans, the demand multiplier associated with reduced loans payments, and the reduction in the effectiveness of a multiplier in an economy operating at or above potential.

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There is also uncertainty about the decrease in repayment as a result of cancellation, though it does not contribute to the range of the estimates. 
Translation: !t is a guess, based on a guess, multipied by a guess, swayed by our own biases, and distorted by the phases of the moon in August. In short, we threw darts at a dartboard from 100 feet away, and moved the board so that the darts would hit exactly where we wanted.

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And that, dear friends, is known as CRFB conservative science. Enjoy the experience.

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Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

The most important problems in economics involve:
  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics. Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps: Ten Steps To Prosperity:
  1. Eliminate FICA
  2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone
  3. Social Security for all
  4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone
  5. Salary for attending school
  6. Eliminate federal taxes on business
  7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 
  8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.
  9. Federal ownership of all banks
  10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 
The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

What kind of people are these? Are they aliens?

The only people who deny America’s bigotry are America’s bigots   ………………………………………………………………………………………………………..   You are alive. That is a miracle because the entire universe works against you. Your whole life, however short or long, is a losing battle against entropy. You, I, seven billion others, and all the fish and all the trees, every living thing struggles against the universe. As does the earth. As does the sun and all the suns and all the planets. Everything struggles against entropy. So you might think we humans would have a bit more empathy for our fellow strugglers. But no. The fishermen do not empathize with the fish. We barely can empathize with people, and even then with only a few. If you travel to another country, you will meet people who do not think the way you do. They are aliens, as are you to them.
How did they get into the Capitol? Lawmakers in Congress feared death
Patriots attack America.
But you don’t need to go far. You can travel in America, where Southerners, Northerners, Easterners, and Westerners toil. All but your closest neighbors seem a bit (or more than a bit) “off.” They don’t think or act exactly like you, though they are doing exactly the same thing you are: Struggling to survive. And we all will lose. The world is a loser’s game, like Las Vegas. We go there to enjoy our losing. Or some do. I for one, have been there twice in my 86 years. I don’t understand the concept of intentionally playing a game you cannot win, when just being alive already forces you to play a game you cannot win. I do not understand the ladies, who sit in front of slots, holding paper cups of chips, and mindlessly inserting one into a slot, pulling a lever or pushing a button, and before even noticing the outcome, already are sliding in another one into the same slot. Insert. Press. Insert. Press. Insert. Press. Lose. To me, they are aliens, wasting the miracle given to them. You and I are surrounded by aliens, people we simply cannot fathom. What is their game plan? What do they hope? What would they consider success when their failure is inevitable? And though I may only marginally understand or not understand most people at all, there is one alien bunch I really, really, really don’t understand. They might as well be born out of octopuses from Mars — that kind of alien. I wonder — I close-my-eyes-and-ponder — are they actually people, and if so. . . What kind of people? You tell me.
Adam Johnson, who allegedly stole Pelosi's lecturn, Jake Angeli charged in Capitol riots - The Washington Post
Aliens among us.
I see aliens who:
  1. Despise every religion, every nationality, every age, every belief group, every geographical existence, every color, every hairstyle, every way of speaking, every size and shape that is different from their own.
  2. Deny human-caused, species-destroying global warming despite the nearly unanimous scientific opinion.
  3. Claim to be “pro-life” (only for the unborn), yet are “pro-death” (for everyone else) by refusing gun control?
  4. Support a violent, white supremacist insurrection that attempted to destroy American democracy by taking over the federal government, then falsely claim the left did it?
  5. Who, despite 200 years of mistreatment and killing of blacks, still refuse to acknowledge bigotry in America?
  6. Disseminate and believe the repeatedly debunked lie that their tarnished hero won the Presidential election?
  7. Refuse mask-wearing despite nearly unanimous scientific opinion, and the fact that refusal endangers fellow Americans.
  8. Value their own lives and their fellow Americans’ lives so little, they must be bribed with beer and Lotto tickets, before agreeing to a vaccination?
  9. Demean the mainstream media in support of a proven liar?
  10. Believe and claim that blacks were “happy” and “treated well” under slavery.
  11. Are flag-waving proud of the nation’s slave history and culture?
  12. Proudly claim to love God and the Judeo-Christian bible, yet support hate-filled, white supremacists and an irreligious sinner?
  13. Promulgate hatred and contempt for blacks, browns, yellows, reds, Mexicans, Muslims, Jews, immigrants, most women, and liberals, but claim to love America?
  14. At our southern border, intentionally destroyed families and tortured children, all to discourage people from seeking a better life, like our ancestors did?
  15. Discourage attempts to save America’s natural lands and species in favor of big business?
  16. Claim to advocate law and order, yet support a man who has cheated on his taxes and his multiple wives, and told more than 30,000 lives while in office.Trump Foundation reaches deal to dissolve amid lawsuit
  17. Respect and adore a braggart, who has gone bankrupt multiple times while cheating thousands of his employees, lenders, and students of his fake University?
  18. Will put one man’s ego ahead of American democracy by passing laws to make voting difficult or impossible for the poor, the black, and the brown?
  19. Have done, and continue to do, everything they can to take healthcare away from the poor?
  20. Get all their beliefs from FOX and a fool like Tucker Carlson, Breitbart, QAnon, Parler, and other fake-conspiracy-promoting sources?
  21. Respect and adore a bully?
  22. Respect and adore a sneaky draft-dodger who disparages as “suckers” the patriots. who gave their lives in service of their country.
  23. Respect and adore a man who, given the vast power of the American Presidency, wasted his precious time playing golf, sending insulting tweets, and making enemies, worldwide?
  24. Now pray for a proven lazy, lying, traitorous, crooked, incompetent, bigoted, mean-spirited, adulterous, psychopathic, egomaniacal loser to return as President of the United States?
What kind of people are these? Are they actual people? Were they born on planet earth? Are they aliens walking among us, pretending to be human while having no humanity? Think about it, What kind of people are these? Aliens. I simply do not understand them. Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

The most important problems in economics involve:
  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics. Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps: Ten Steps To Prosperity:
  1. Eliminate FICA
  2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone
  3. Social Security for all
  4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone
  5. Salary for attending school
  6. Eliminate federal taxes on business
  7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 
  8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.
  9. Federal ownership of all banks
  10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 
The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

   

Your town, county, or state is running short of money. It may not be your politicians’ fault.

When you live in, or merely visit, the U.S., you not only are governed by U.S. laws, but you also deal with state, county and city/village laws.
How To Prepare To Send Your Child To Kindergarten
Local taxes fund most local government spending.
The idea is that ultimately, we all exist locally, and by geography and custom, all localities are different. State and local governments are tasked with many responsibilities — police, fire, education, streets, employment, poverty, courts, jails, etc. — and all of these are funded in whole or in part by local taxes. The federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, has the unlimited ability to create dollars at the touch of a computer key. It cannot run short of dollars. Federal taxes do not fund federal spending. In fact, federal tax dollars are destroyed upon receipt by the U.S. Treasury.

(Federal taxes generally are paid from checking accounts, where the money comes out of the M1 money supply. The these M1 dollars are sent to the federal government, they disappear and cease to be part of any money supply measure. They are destroyed.

To pay its bills, the federal government creates new dollars, ad hoc.)

How the US military has failed to address white supremacy in its ranks | US military | The Guardian
Federal taxes do not fund federal spending.
The state and local governments, being monetarily non-sovereign, can and do run short of dollars, yet at least nine states send net dollars to the federal government! Because the federal government spends without relying on taxes, federal deficit spending adds growth dollars to the economy. State/local government spending, which relies on taxes, does not add any dollars to the economy. Thus, from the standpoint of economic growth, federal spending is far more stimulative than local government spending. For many years, my home state was Illinois. It perennially was and still is short of money. So are many of the towns and counties in Illinois. For instance:
Chicago Faces $1.2 Billion Budget Shortfall in 2021: Lightfoot Heather Cherone | August 31, 2020 On top of that colossal shortfall, the city’s financial picture worsened significantly during the past three months because of an “economic catastrophe caused by the coronavirus pandemic,” Lightfoot said. The city’s budget for the current fiscal year is now $799 million in the red.
Is Illinois’s main financial problem COVID was an “economic catastrophe”? Or, Is it because the crooked politicians are stealing so much? Well, we certainly have had our share of rascals. Wikipedia was kind enough to supply this list:

Illinois politicians convicted of crimes: Roger Agpawa, Patricia Bailey, Edward J. Barrett, William Beavers, James E. Bish, Rod Blagojevich, Louis F. Capuzi, Isaac Carothers, Donald D. Carpentier, Willie Cochran, Frank Collin, G. Bradford Cook, Jerome Cosentino, Bill Cox, Rita Crundwell, John A. D’Arco Jr., James DeLeo, Bruce A. Farley, Keith Farnham, Morgan M. Finley, La Shawn Ford, H, John F. Harris, Dennis Hastert, Orville Hodge, Constance A. Howard, Douglas Huff, J, Jesse Jackson Jr., Sandi Jackson, Thomas E. Keane, Otto Kerner Jr., John McCandish King, Joe Kotlarz, James Laski, Terry Link, Betty Loren-Maltese, William Lorimer, M, William P. MacCracken Jr., Pat Marcy, Walter C. McAvoy, Robert F. McPartlin, Edward Nedza, Charles Panici, Sandra M. Pihos, Jacob Rehm, Mel Reynolds, Edward J. Rosewell, Dan Rostenkowski, Fred Roti, Andrew Russel, George Ryan, Martin Sandoval, Nick Sauer, Aaron Schock, Edward T. Scholl, William J. Scott, Derrick Smith, Roger Stanley, Ron Stephens, Arthur Swanson, Donne Trotter, Arenda Troutman, V, Edward Vrdolyak, Dan Walker, Jack E. Walker

Yes, whatever they stole came from the taxpayers. So, if not for these criminals, would Chicago be solvent? Well, what about this:
MORE THAN 2,200 COOK COUNTY, IL WORKERS RECEIVE SALARIES OVER $100,000 Ted Dabrowski, John Klingner A review of the county’s payroll database finds that more than 2,200 Cook County workers receive salaries over $100,000. For career county workers – those who’ll work for 30-plus years – that means pension benefits worth millions of dollars over the course of their retirements.
So is the problem due to high salaries and monster pension deals for Illinois government workers? Yes, that may contribute to the problem. Or, is this the real problem:

After decades of historic mismanagement, Illinois is now grappling with $15 billion of unpaid bills and an unthinkable quarter-trillion dollars owed to public employees when they retire.

The budget crisis has forced Illinois to jack up property taxes so high that people are leaving in droves. Illinois may soon have to take the unprecedented step of cutting off sales of lottery tickets because the state won’t be able to pay winners. by Matt Egan
Lotteries are supposed to make money for the state. How is it possible that Illinois’s lottery loses money? So, is that the problem? Sheer mismanagement? Well, what about this:
We’re being squeezed, Pritzker Stop siphoning money away from towns and villages Chicago Tribune, By Kevin Wallace For the past decade, Springfield has been taking a substantial portion of revenue from Illinois municipalities, arguing that state government needs the money more than local taxpayers. These funds can amount to up to 20% of a town’s operating budget.  In 2011, Springfield increased the state income tax and also started taking a larger share of the local pie — dropping the agreed-upon 10% it gives back to just 6.06%. This year, Gov. J.B. Pritzker has proposed taking an additional $152 million to fill the state budget gap. But local mayors are facing their own budget challenges.  To make up for continued losses, towns will face the option of cutting services, laying off personnel, or raising property taxes. Making matters worse, keeping payments at current levels places a heavier burden on towns that can least afford it — those already hurting from weaker tax bases and sky-high property taxes.
So is there a problem with states taking too much from local taxpayers, yet still aren’t able to pay their own bills? Or, perhaps this is part of the problem:
The states with the lowest net federal funding per resident are:
  1. New Jersey (-$2,368)
  2. Massachusetts (-$2,343)
  3. New York (-$1,792)
  4. North Dakota (-$720)
  5. Illinois (-$364)
  6. New Hampshire (-$234)
  7. Washington (-$184)
  8. Nebraska (-$164)
  9. Colorado (-$95)
Nine states send more dollars to the federal government than they receive from the federal government, which is ridiculous on the face of it. But it gets worse. Much worse. The following is from the uber right-wing Washington Examiner:
Red states should revolt against the ‘blue state bailout’ by Stephen Moore | March 04, 2021 Congressional Democrats are a runaway train with a drunk-on-power conductor in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. No matter how much evidence pours in that the economy doesn’t need $1.9 trillion more in debt spending, the Pelosi locomotive keeps crashing down the track toward the financial cliff. Generations will have to pay for the joyride.
Can you imagine Trumpers’ pulses racing after reading that? After we get past the hyperbole of “runaway train,” the “drunk on power,” the “locomotive” that keeps “crashing down the track,’ the “financial cliff” and the generations who will “pay for the joyride,” let’s see if we can find anything of substance. There is the claim that the economy “doesn’t need $1.9 trillion more.” It’s the word, “need” that puzzles me. What does it mean? Does it mean that all the financial problems facing us Americans are now solved and no further money would improve our lives? No, of course not. Does it mean the federal government can’t afford to spend an additional $1.9 trillion? No, the federal government can afford anything. Or, does it really mean:
One of the worst features of the bill is the “blue state bailout.” Twenty-one Republican governors and one Democrat complained that the bill “punishes” states that did the right thing by keeping their economies and businesses open during the pandemic.
Hmmm. How are red states being “punished” by receiving money, whether or not the amount is less than blue states? And, I don’t recall the red state complaints about them receiving more money from the federal government, year-after-year than do the blue states. And as for doing “the right thing,” one could doubt that risking your citizens’ lives for the sake of business is “the right thing.” But the real ignorance comes with Florida’s Gov. Desantis:
Florida Gov. Ron Desantis said the bill “loots” the red states to pay for Democratic governors who have locked down their economies.
In truth, his comment is no more wrong-headed than what’s coming from virtually all the other politicians. He claims that somehow the red states are paying for federal spending. Let’s be clear. No one pays for federal spending, not the red and not the blue. The federal government creates all of its spending dollars from thin air. Federal taxes pay for nothing. In fact, they are destroyed upon receipt. Those precious dollars you send to DC cease to exist the moment they are received. The federal government creates brand new dollars ad hoc, to pay all its bills.
Desantis has good reason to complain. Florida has a slightly higher population than New York, but New York gets $2,799 per person, or twice as much money as the $1,355 per person that Florida receives. In other words: Floridians are paying for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s incompetence. That is precisely what is happening because the main factor in determining how much money each state gets is not its population but how high its unemployment rate has risen.
Aside from conveniently forgetting that year-after-year, New Yorkers send net dollars to the federal government while Floridians receive net dollars, the whining right also seems not to understand the purpose of unemployment compensation. It’s to help people who need help, a concept that seems to be alien to those oh-so-compassionate conservatives. And now comes the fact cherry-picking.
The governors’ joint statement declares: “A state’s ability to keep businesses open and people employed should not be a penalizing factor when distributing funds. If Congress is going to provide aid to states, it should be on an equitable population basis.”
Said another way, “A person having lost his job should not receive unemployment compensation.” That is known as right-wing logic.
Most red states have already balanced their budgets. So how will Republican governors use their free money?
WAIT! Now, after all the complaints, the Republicans acknowledge they are receiving “free money”??
Here’s a better idea: Rather than squander the money with more bureaucratic spending and the risk of inflating a financial bubble in their state budgets in the years ahead, devote every penny of these funds to finance tax reform and relief.
This phrase makes no sense: ” . . .inflating a financial bubble in their state budgets . . . ” Someone please explain it to me.
Five states are now examining eliminating their state income taxes. Those states are Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, Utah, and West Virginia. Florida, Tennessee, and Texas already have.
Or could they, as a last resort, improve the lives of their residents? Improve their schools? Reduce hunger? Improve housing? Eliminate regressive sales taxes? Provide Medicare for All? No, they would prefer to assist the rich by eliminating state income taxes, which are far less regressive.
It would be rough justice for the blue state bailout. If Democrats take the red states’ money, Republican governors should make their states income-tax-free havens and steal the blue states’ families and businesses. The states without income taxes create twice as many jobs as the high-tax blue states.
First, Democrats are not taking “red states’ money.” The money is created by the federal government. Second, why would this influence whether or not Republican governors make their states income-tax-free? Should receiving less money from the government encourage red states to reduce taxes!!? Makes no sense. IN SUMMARY A lake should not take water from a desert. The well-fed should not take food from the starving, The rich should not take money from the poor. And, the Monetarily Sovereign federal government should not take money from monetarily non-sovereign entities like the states, the counties, the villages, the businesses, or the people.
If you think California, Illinois, New Jersey, and New York are melting down now, wait until they have to compete against regions of the country in the South and the mountain states with no income taxes. Will the last person in New York please turn out the lights?
Try to forgive the obvious joy right-winger Stephen Moore displays at visualizing left-wing Americans suffer. Apparently, for him, this is known as “patriotism,” “love of country,” and “concern for your fellow citizens.” At the next Olympics, we hope he doesn’t cheer only for red-state Americans while booing those from blue states. Unus pro omnibus, omnes pro uno Economic growth is achieved when dollars are added to the economy. Federal deficit spending adds dollars to the economy. Local government spending does not. A healthy economy requires the federal government to support, where possible, and not resent, state/local government expenses. Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

The most important problems in economics involve:
  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics. Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps: Ten Steps To Prosperity:
  1. Eliminate FICA
  2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone
  3. Social Security for all
  4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone
  5. Salary for attending school
  6. Eliminate federal taxes on business
  7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 
  8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.
  9. Federal ownership of all banks
  10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 
The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest. MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

The Medicare for All mystery

I have been with Medicare for twenty years. Four months ago, following a 12-year fight with cancer, my wife spent three weeks in the hospital. The medical bills just for those three weeks exceeded $650,000. My out-of-pocket cost was less than $1,000. Medicare and the supplement paid the rest. Based on my personal experience with Medicare, which has been excellent, I believe all Americans — not just those who are 65+ years old — should be able to avail themselves of this program. Our Monetarily Sovereign government easily could pay for a comprehensive, no-deductible version, that not only would pay for everything but be generous-to-providers so as to attract more people into the healthcare professions. My sense is that this belief is shared by the vast majority of those who already have Medicare. And there surely is a need. Here are excerpts from a health care report that though admittedly is old (2010), I feel quite certain very little has changed:
Among seven nations studied—Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States—the U.S. ranks last overall, as it did in the 2007, 2006, and 2004. Most troubling, the U.S. fails to achieve better health outcomes than the other countries, and as shown in the earlier editions, the U.S. is last on dimensions of access, patient safety, coordination, efficiency, and equity. The Netherlands ranks first, followed closely by the U.K. and Australia. Quality: The indicators of quality were grouped into four categories: effective care, safe care, coordinated care, and patient-centered care. Compared with the other six countries, the U.S. fares best on provision and receipt of preventive and patient-centered care. However, its low scores on chronic care management and safe, coordinated care pull its overall quality score down. Access: Not surprisingly—given the absence of universal coverage—people in the U.S. go without needed health care because of cost more often than people do in the other countries. There is a frequent misperception that such tradeoffs are inevitable; but patients in the Netherlands and Germany have quick access to specialty services and face little out-of-pocket costs. Efficiency: On indicators of efficiency, the U.S. ranks last among the seven countries,. The U.S. has poor performance on measures of national health expenditures and administrative costs as well as on measures of the use of information technology, rehospitalization, and duplicative medical testing. Equity: The U.S. ranks a clear last on nearly all measures of equity. Americans with below-average incomes were much more likely than their counterparts in other countries to report not visiting a physician when sick, not getting a recommended test, treatment, or follow-up care, not filling a prescription, or not seeing a dentist when needed because of costs. Long, healthy, and productive lives: The U.S. ranks last overall with poor scores on all three indicators of long, healthy, and productive lives.
Clearly, the American private insurance industry has been failing Americans, especially those in the lower half of the income/wealth measure. Before we continue, please remember that of the seven nations compared, five are Monetarily Sovereign and two (Netherlands and Germany) are monetarily non-sovereign. Why is this important? Because the Monetarily Sovereign nations like the U.S. have the unlimited ability to create their own sovereign currency. They never can run short of money. Monetarily non-sovereign nations must rely on taxes to pay for things. Contrary to popular myth, the FICA tax does not pay for Medicare or Social Security. It pays for nothing. Even if our U.S. government were to collect zero taxes, we have the infinite ability to fund healthcare insurance, indefinitely. Though the U.S. government has this ability, it provides less service than do the two monetarily non-sovereign nations that must rely on taxes. Because the U.S. private insurance industry has been unable or unwilling to support Americans, various plans under the label “Medicare for All” have been suggested. Because of Gap Psychology (the desire to distance oneself from those below, on any social measure), the wealthy right-wing opposes such plans, just as it opposes all forms of federal aid to those who are not wealthy. So, in describing a Medicare for All plan, they intentionally reference plans with shortcomings, then falsely declare those shortcomings are a necessary part of all plans. Here is an example:
LFA Member Profile: J.D. Tuccille
J.D. TUCCILLE: Let ’em eat cake.
Medicare for All Is Bad Medicine A better prescription would be to get the government entirely out of health care. J.D. TUCCILLE Opponents of choice in medicine are at it again, promoting Medicare for All with the U.S. government as the single payer and private alternatives outlawed.
“Private alternatives outlawed” is not a necessary feature of all Medicare for All plans. It is not even a necessary feature of today’s Medicare. For no good reason, today’s Medicare doesn’t pay 100%. Rather, there are deductibles, that can be covered by private Medicare Supplement insurance. To my knowledge, the sole purpose of “private alternatives outlawed” is to prevent people from double-dipping, i.e. receiving two payments for the same procedure. But since the U.S. does offer Medicare, and private alternatives do exist, presumably double-dipping is not a true problem.
The push comes as health care systems around the world try to catch their breath from the stress test inflicted by the pandemic—and by normal demand for expensive services. While American medicine has its share of problems, single-payer supporters would take all of the flaws in the system and make them universal and mandatory.
No, single-payer supporters would take all the benefits of Medicare, and make them universal.
H.R.1976, the Medicare for All Act of 2021 makes it “unlawful for … a private health insurer to sell health insurance coverage that duplicates the benefits provided under this Act” or for employers to offer alternative coverage. Providers wouldn’t be forced to participate; the proposed law lets Americans pay non-participating physicians out of pocket for services—subject to regulations. Why would Americans pay for services covered by a hypothetical Medicare for All? To answer that question, look north of the border, where Canada’s single-payer system, commonly called Medicare, struggles to meet patients’ needs. “With COVID-19 fuelling a surge in hospitalizations, the latest data provided by the Ministry of Health shows that as of December 31, 2020, there were 29,650 people on a waiting list for surgery” in Saskatchewan, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) reported earlier this month. The CBC noted similar delays in other provinces. “Specialist physicians surveyed report a median waiting time of 22.6 weeks between referral from a general practitioner and receipt of treatment,” which is the longest wait recorded, according to the free-market Fraser Institute.
The article continues with a litany of examples demonstrating how, under some forms of single-payer insurance, patients must wait a long time for service. This is supposed to make you believe that long waits are a necessary problem with a Medicare for All plan, but not with private insurance. However, any discussion of Medicare only tells you who is paying, the government or the private insurance companies. It says nothing about services from doctors, hospitals, nurses, et al. Given the federal government’s infinite ability to spend, and no need to scrimp for profits, the federal government has far greater power to pay for any level of service. It could make the entire health care industry so financially attractive that the numbers of doctors hospitals and nurses could double or triple. Taken to an extreme, the government even could afford to fund a private doctor for every man, woman, and child in America. OK, no one recommends that, but it merely demonstrates how the government easily can pay — much more easily than private insurance can — for the world’s greatest service. There would be no need for the long waits with which Mr. Tuccille threatens you.
Such waits cost more than money—although they cost plenty of that. “[T]wice as many Ontarians with heart ailments passed away waiting for surgery during the pandemic than before COVID-19 hit,” according to the National Post. To relieve the backlog, Canadian provincial governments, which manage the single-payer system, are turning to private clinics. In Quebec, “without the private sector contracts, a region like Laval would have delayed 76 per cent of surgeries instead of 31 per cent,” the CBC noted in February.
“Private sector contracts”? Without realizing it, the author, J.D. Tuccille just demonstrated that a Monetarily Sovereign government like Canada’s has the unlimited ability to fund good service. “Private sector contracts” are simply an example of single-payer insurance. The government pays for service. It demonstrates that the private insurance sector was unable or unwilling to provide enough coverage, so the government had to step in and pay what the citizenry could not afford to pay.
As the data suggests, though, the public sector in many places had trouble delivering as advertised long before anybody had heard of COVID-19.
No, Mr. Tuccille, the data demonstrate that the private sector could not and did not deliver health care for all. That is exactly what is happening in America.
In Germany, where those making less than €64,350 per year must participate in the government health insurance system which is funded on a quarterly basis, the system runs out of money on a regular basis.
Unlike the U.S., the German government is monetarily non-sovereign. It can, and does, run short of money.
“State health insurance patients are struggling to see their doctors towards the end of every quarter, while privately insured patients get easy access,” Deutsche Welle reported in 2018. “The researchers traced the phenomenon to Germany’s ‘budget’ system, which means that state health insurance companies only reimburse the full cost of certain treatments up to a particular number of patients or a particular monetary value … Once that budget has been exhausted for the quarter, doctors slow down — and sometimes even shut their practices altogether.” The “budget” acts as backdoor rationing, limiting costs by choking off access for publicly insured patients to all but emergency medical care once the magic number is hit. Single-payer advocates often criticize private medicine for being cost-conscious, but government systems put at least as much emphasis on the bottom line as any corporate accountant.
Again, without realizing it, J.D. Tuccille demonstrates why Medicare for All is necessary for America. You and I and the German government are monetarily non-sovereign. We all can run short of dollars. The U.S. government cannot. The U.S. government has no profit motive — no “bottom line” — to emphasize. Sadly, even some Monetarily Sovereign governments are (intentionally??) as ignorant of economics as is Mr. Tuccille. The Libertarians who bleat and moan about the U.S. deficit and debt, seem to have no memory of the fact that despite massive spending for the past 80 years, and numerous tax cuts, the U.S. government never has struggled to pay its bills. It hasn’t run out of dollars. It hasn’t had to bounce any checks. This all relates to the Big Lie in economics that says: “Federal taxes fund federal spending.” It simply is not true. Federal spending always has been funded the same way: The government passes laws from thin air, and these laws provide for dollars being created from thin air. There is no limit on the laws the government can pass, thus there is no limit on the dollars the government can create.
That’s especially obvious in the United Kingdom, where the National Health Service has a cult-like status. During the pandemic, this took the form of a “Stay Home. Protect the NHS. Save Lives.” campaign. “The NHS is under severe strain and we must take action to protect it, both so our doctors and nurses can continue to save lives and so they can vaccinate as many people as possible as quickly as we can,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson scolded the public.
Utter nonsense. Boris Johnson either doesn’t know what he’s talking about, or more likely, he is conning the British public. England, being Monetarily Sovereign, never unintentionally can run short of British pounds. Never.
The campaign worked. Even people with medical concerns stayed home, resulting in a drop in doctor visits and a 90 percent plunge in hospital admissions.
Truly sad that sick people are being lied to by their elected leaders. One might say, it’s sickening. And now comes the overt statement of the Big Lie:
It’s difficult to imagine Americans venerating government bureaucracy (although feelings about Social Security come disturbingly close).
American’s love Social Security because it provides something they otherwise could not afford to obtain on the private market: Financial support in their old age.
But it’s impossible to pretend that Medicare for All could escape the concerns that plague all tax-paid medicine.
Again, the Big Lie. Medicare is not “tax-paid medicine.” It is government-paid medicine.
“A doubling of all currently projected federal individual and corporate income tax collections would be insufficient to finance the added federal costs of the plan,” the Mercatus Center’s Charles Blahous pointed out about an earlier Medicare for All proposal.
WRONG! WONG! WRONG! FEDERAL TAXES DO NOT FUND FEDERAL SPENDING. PERIOD.
Health care in the United States requires reform, without doubt. But rather than emulate the heavy state involvement that evokes headaches elsewhere in the world, a better prescription would be to get government entirely out of medicine and encourage more competition and choice.
What a pitiful close to a pitiful article. Mr. Tuccille wants your healthcare to rely on the profit motive of American business. Mr. Tuccille blithely omits the central issue: The unaffordability of healthcare for millions of Americans. If you are not rich, and you do not have a job that pays for your healthcare, you better not get sick. You either will suffer physically and die early from lack of care and/or suffer financially from trying to pay for your care. I am retired. I am not poor by any measure, but my wife’s $650,000+ medical bills in January, plus those huge bills we received for all previous12 years of her cancer, would have been financially painful. As you contemplate Mr. Tuccille’s (and the entire conservative wing’s) thoughtless comments, ask yourself: “What would I do about a $650,000+ hospital bill. And what would my private insurer do about it?” The federal government not only could afford to pay that bill, but it even could afford to pay a $6 million, or $60 million bill, and never blink an eye. Could your private insurance company afford that? If you lost your job, would you even be able to find a private carrier who would accept you? Let us all pray for Mr. Tuccille’s continuing financial ability to afford his private insurance so he can close his eyes to those less affluent than him, and continue his “Let ’em eat cake” articles. Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

The most important problems in economics involve:
  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics. Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps: Ten Steps To Prosperity:
  1. Eliminate FICA
  2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone
  3. Social Security for all
  4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone
  5. Salary for attending school
  6. Eliminate federal taxes on business
  7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 
  8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.
  9. Federal ownership of all banks
  10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 
The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY