How To
Stimulate Consumer Spending And The Economy
My
survey produced an interesting anomaly--- several respondents felt that
excessive consumer spending was the primary cause of the economic problems we
face today, and that spending is not to be encouraged.
But the
root problem they were correctly speaking to is the source of the spending
money, not the spending itself. Spending is essential for demand creation, and
increasing demand is what produces jobs.
So why
we ask, does government remove the dollars from the economy before they
accomplish the demand stimulus "thingie" (highly technical economics
jargon)? Nearly half the survey responses observed that consumption taxes (The
Fair Tax) are far more productive/creative than income taxes.
The
other half wants to replace the IRC (Internal Revenue Code) with a Flat Tax on
all forms of income. Both suggestions are simple, and quantum leaps better than
anything being seriously considered by congress--- "seriously" being
the operative word.
A combination
of the two--- priceless, but later!
The
single, easiest, fastest, biggest, consumer-spending instant winner bonanza is
not even a twinkle in an old politician's eye--- there are far too few new
politicians. Replace the Social Security Retirement Program with a plain
vanilla pension plan, pre-funded by smaller, mandated employee contributions.
The
current methodology is simple: it takes money out of our pockets (and our
employers) puts it though governmental blenders, and spits out IOUs for a
meager benefit at retirement. Why not let the private sector provide pension
benefits to all employees under the direction of a trimmed down Social Security
bureaucracy?
How? By
purchasing Social Security Retirement Income Annuities (SSRIAs). Google "A
Capitalist's Social Security Reform" for the nitty-gritty details, but
here's what we accomplish:
We
stimulate spending immediately by only withdrawing 3% of income from 300
million pockets and pocketbooks, and nothing from employer treasuries. We provide
demand-push spending money and reduce demand for consumer credit.
And,
looking forward an article or two, we collect a tax on every dollar spent in
the economy--- except those for food, healthcare, and higher education; even
from our friends and neighbors in the Underground and Internet economies.
Some
SSRIA details include: (1) No sales commission, no more than 10% in an approved
list of equities, no multilevel derivatives or open end Mutual Funds, and no
speculations; (2) Limited voluntary contributions and unemployed dependent
eligibility; (3) Phased in transfer of existing Social Security and government
employee pensions (including congress).
Using
life annuities + a 50% of cash value, pre-retirement, term-life insurance
benefit could prepay retiree Medicare benefits as well!
There
are several other ideas on the more-spending-money-in-consumer-pockets agenda,
and some thoughts about consumer confidence. It's tough to be confident, for
example, when you click the links between congress and business lobbyists.
It's
tough to be confident when we see Wall Street control its regulators,
constantly produce the same speculative garbage, and reward its senior
employees and sales persons from the carcasses of mutilated shareholder-owners
and "hostaged" taxpayers.
These
confidence destroyers can be dealt with, but first the rest of the story, on
increasing consumer spending without credit abuse:
One:
Reduce the interest rate on all mortgages at least twenty-five basis points,
and adjust monthly payments accordingly. The banks owe us, and will make-up the
difference from increased business activity.
Two:
Bring the credit card mafia to its knees by enforcing reasonable usury laws (a
15% APR cap, for example) and include all fees, late charges and other debris
in the calculation. Make minimum payments include a percentage of principal,
and treat credit abuse like drug abuse.
Three:
Eliminate all nuisance fees, taxes, surcharges, etc, forced on businesses and passed
through to consumer statements. A $65 motel room should be a $65 motel room.
Four:
Reduce state and local property taxes 10% per year for all persons over age 65,
and devise a way to prorate this into rents paid by seniors--- i.e., require
landlords to pass through their savings.
Five:
Eliminate all toll collections on highways, bridges, tunnels, subways etc.---
everyone benefits from our transportation resources, the green impact is
obvious, and demand for gasoline would be reduced significantly.
Six:
Establish a combined federal/state/local $1,000 per month tax-free program for
all workers. (The first $12,000 of each person's income is untaxed). Workers
earning less than $12K annually receive the difference in bank account debit
cards. Usage could be restricted to essentials (no alcohol, gambling, tobacco,
guns, jet skis, etc.)
Seven:
Establish a $750 per month workfare program for the unemployed actually seeking
work, but requiring no less than twenty hours of community service per week.
Offset would be reduced numbers of government workers, shorter unemployment
lines, and lower employer overhead expenses.
Thank
you again for participating. I hope you all appreciate how important it is for
you to help get simple ideas like these into the legislative arena. Find the
time to address some of them aggressively in blogs, networks, and
communications with elected officials.
Wall
Street's "Emperors New Clothes" game plan has infiltrated the federal
government. The financial community has no interest in protecting investors
from speculation and our elected representatives seem interested only in
expanding their power by catering to the most generous special interests.
Do I
hear congressional term limits as a "write-in" candidate for number
eight?
Steve
Selengut
sanserve
(at) aol.com
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com
Author
of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy"
Jobs,consumer
spending,credit card debt,employer,benefits,employee,social security
reform,APR,term limits,congress,IRC,federal income taxes,business
taxes,self-employed,economy,investments,consumer spending,GDP,pension
plan,annuities
How To
Stimulate Consumer Spending and Jumpstart The Economy
The
current methodology is simple: it takes money out of our pockets (and our
employers) puts it though governmental blenders, and spits out a meager benefit
at retirement. Why not let the private sector provide pension benefits to all
employees under the direction of a trimmed down Social Security bureaucracy?
The
single, easiest, fastest, biggest, consumer-spending instant winner bonanza is
not even a twinkle in an old politician's eye--- and there are far too few new
politicians. Replace the Social Security Retirement Program with a plain
vanilla pension plan, pre-funded by smaller, mandated employee contributions.
http://www.sancoservices.com/50CurrentInvestmentArticles.htm