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Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

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Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Hmmmmmmmm........

“Together, we can end Wall Street bailouts,” House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) says in this week’s Republican address, which marks the fifth anniversary of the Dodd-Frank law that has hurt our economy and made it harder to create jobs.

Here are some key quotes from the address, which you can watch now:

"You may not have heard of Dodd-Frank, but it’s essentially Obamacare for our economy and your household finances. And just like Obamacare, Dodd-Frank has left us with fewer choices, higher costs and less freedom."

“When President Obama signed Dodd-Frank into law five years ago with much fanfare and celebration, we were told it would ‘lift the economy,’ ‘end too big to fail’ and ‘increase financial stability.’ It didn’t happen.”

“Dodd-Frank did nothing to reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were at the epicenter of the crisis. It enshrined taxpayer-funded bailouts and ‘too big to fail’ into law, and it imposed
“Together, we can end Wall Street bailouts,” House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) says in this week’s Republican address, which marks the fifth anniversary of the Dodd-Frank law that has hurt our economy and made it harder to create jobs.

Here are some key quotes from the address, which you can watch now:

"You may not have heard of Dodd-Frank, but it’s essentially Obamacare for our economy and your household finances. And just like Obamacare, Dodd-Frank has left us with fewer choices, higher costs and less freedom."

“When President Obama signed Dodd-Frank into law five years ago with much fanfare and celebration, we were told it would ‘lift the economy,’ ‘end too big to fail’ and ‘increase financial stability.’ It didn’t happen.”

“Dodd-Frank did nothing to reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were at the epicenter of the crisis. It enshrined taxpayer-funded bailouts and ‘too big to fail’ into law, and it imposed 400 new burdensome, job-destroying regulations upon our economy.”

“Services that we all once took for granted – like free checking – are being curtailed or eliminated because of Dodd-Frank. Before, 75 percent of banks offered free checking. Just two years after Dodd-Frank became law, that number was cut almost in half.”
”If we want strong economic growth, more freedom and an end to bailouts, it’s time we commit to making sure this anniversary is Dodd-Frank’s last anniversary. House Republicans are working to do just that. Together, we can end Wall Street bailouts, have a healthier economy, and protect consumer choice.”
In its report on the address, The Hill notes that “Hensarling has pushed for a series of hearings in an effort to make the case that the law should be revisited, casting it as a threat to the economy.

Watch the address now, and learn more about our efforts to address the people’s priorities.


“Services that we all once took for granted – like free checking – are being curtailed or eliminated because of Dodd-Frank. Before, 75 percent of banks offered free checking. Just two years after Dodd-Frank became law, that number was cut almost in half.”
”If we want strong economic growth, more freedom and an end to bailouts, it’s time we commit to making sure this anniversary is Dodd-Frank’s last anniversary. House Republicans are working to do just that. Together, we can end Wall Street bailouts, have a healthier economy, and protect consumer choice.”
In its report on the address, The Hill notes that “Hensarling has pushed for a series of hearings in an effort to make the case that the law should be revisited, casting it as a threat to the economy.

Watch the address now, and learn more about our efforts to address the people’s priorities.

You know what kills more jobs than regulations? Crippling recessions caused by out-of-control banks.
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

You know what kills more jobs than regulations? Crippling recessions caused by out-of-control banks.

Not necessarily. Take a look at the marijuana industry in Colorado. It's running pretty gosh darn well, and as an industry that banks are not going to allow for accounts because of the federal statutes. Granted, a lot of that has to do with the fad status of J being legal, but I'd say by now that's come and gone.

The beauty about pure capitalism is that there is always a method of entry and always a way to beat natural monopolies. Only when you start instituting artificial monopolies, artificial barriers of entry, and artificial price ceilings/floors do you then begin to see institutions taking advantage of these situations, which lead to the "crippling recessions" you have cited.
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

About those collegians, a lot of which are getting worthless degrees they'll never use: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-18/how-student-loans-create-demand-useless-degrees

Oh, and part of the student loan act is that the loan cannot be dissolved in bankruptcy court. It's something to be very careful of when you're lending P2P, as plenty of people get the loan, pay off their student bills, and then default because they can.
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Counterproductive???

@allansteele25: Cambridge MA taxi drivers are on strike today, to protest Uber proliferation. Riders will have to use alternatives, like Uber. Mmm...
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Counterproductive???

@allansteele25: Cambridge MA taxi drivers are on strike today, to protest Uber proliferation. Riders will have to use alternatives, like Uber. Mmm...

Unions just can't stand a little competition, eh? And yet, there are still many states that do not follow the Taft-Hartley Act, unions are allowed to form monopolies such as the NFL, and in California, they don't want to be held to the $15/hr standard they're trying to put in.
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Unions just can't stand a little competition, eh? And yet, there are still many states that do not follow the Taft-Hartley Act, unions are allowed to form monopolies such as the NFL, and in California, they don't want to be held to the $15/hr standard they're trying to put in.

I don't believe there's a taxi cab driver union but I could be mistaken...
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

The medallion system, at least in NYC, is considered as such.

In that case, the individual drivers aren't unionized as you have to own a medallion in order to own a taxi, so one person or entity might own some 20 cabs and then hire on the drivers as (likely) contract employees. It's the same net effect on wages, but more legal protections would go towards the owners of capital in that case.
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

And since when did the union, rather than the owners, create the monopoly that is the NFL?

The NFL is officially a monopoly, and is only allowed to be one if the players are part of a union.
 
Counterproductive???

@allansteele25: Cambridge MA taxi drivers are on strike today, to protest Uber proliferation. Riders will have to use alternatives, like Uber. Mmm...
The problem with Uber is they want to be exempt from the laws that govern what they do.
 
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