A focused study group for the discussion of economics and economic policy.
32036 Members
We'll be adding more communities soon!
© 2020 Relevant Protocols Inc.
A focused study group for the discussion of economics and economic policy.
32036 Members
We'll be adding more communities soon!
© 2020 Relevant Protocols Inc.
Relevant
Hot
New
Spam
Relevant
Hot
New
Spam
0
14.7K
0
14.7K
money printer go BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
money printer go BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
Whitehouse wants a thumbs up from the stupids
Whitehouse wants a thumbs up from the stupids
The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package no more than $1 trillion before August and before lawmakers head home for summer recess. This package would provide a range of supports to assist people, corporations, and the economy as the next phase of the country reopening occurs. “President Donald Trump and senior White House officials have said a payroll tax cut, liability reform, tax incentives for businesses to adapt to the pandemic and a potential back-to-work bonus are priorities for the administration.”
The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package no more than $1 trillion before August and before lawmakers head home for summer recess. This package would provide a range of supports to assist people, corporations, and the economy as the next phase of the country reopening occurs. “President Donald Trump and senior White House officials have said a payroll tax cut, liability reform, tax incentives for businesses to adapt to the pandemic and a potential back-to-work bonus are priorities for the administration.”
Each country injects lot of money to their economy. So in that case there less chance of devaluation of USD compared to other currencies. It is the right time to inject the stimulus package.
Each country injects lot of money to their economy. So in that case there less chance of devaluation of USD compared to other currencies. It is the right time to inject the stimulus package.
The White House printed a lot of dollars. And that weakened the dollar. It’s not a problem for them to turn on the machine again and again. But how does this affect the economy in the future? I think very negatively
The White House printed a lot of dollars. And that weakened the dollar. It’s not a problem for them to turn on the machine again and again. But how does this affect the economy in the future? I think very negatively
I wanna to reach the white house
I wanna to reach the white house
>"The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package by the first week in August, before lawmakers head home for their annual summer recess, and to keep the cost at $1 trillion or less, according to Vice President Mike Pence’s top aide."
>"The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package by the first week in August, before lawmakers head home for their annual summer recess, and to keep the cost at $1 trillion or less, according to Vice President Mike Pence’s top aide."
So - so! >"The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package by the first week in August, before lawmakers head home for their annual summer recess, and to keep the cost at $1 trillion or less, according to Vice President Mike Pence’s top aide."
So - so! >"The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package by the first week in August, before lawmakers head home for their annual summer recess, and to keep the cost at $1 trillion or less, according to Vice President Mike Pence’s top aide."
The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package no more than $1 trillion before August and before lawmakers head home for summer recess. This package would provide a range of supports to assist people, corporations, and the economy as the next phase of the country reopening occurs. “President Donald Trump and senior White House officials have said a payroll tax cut, liability reform, tax incentives for businesses to adapt to the pandemic and a potential back-to-work bonus are priorities for the administration.”
The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package no more than $1 trillion before August and before lawmakers head home for summer recess. This package would provide a range of supports to assist people, corporations, and the economy as the next phase of the country reopening occurs. “President Donald Trump and senior White House officials have said a payroll tax cut, liability reform, tax incentives for businesses to adapt to the pandemic and a potential back-to-work bonus are priorities for the administration.”
White House Wants Stimulus by August Recess With $1 Trillion Cap By  Jordan Fabian  and  Kevin Cirilli July 7, 2020, 8:32 PM GMT+6:30Updated on July 7, 2020, 9:45 PM GMT+6:30 Payroll tax cut sought, administration wants to curb spending Need to balance income support with work incentives, aide says Polls Reflect Trump's Lack of Leadership: Chatham House Unmute Polls Reflect Trump's Lack of Leadership: Chatham House The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package by the first week in August, before lawmakers head home for their annual summer recess, and to keep the cost at $1 trillion or less, according to Vice President Mike Pence’s top aide. “I think we want to make sure that people that are still unemployed or hurting are protected but at the same time, we want to take into consideration the fact the economy is bouncing back and want to try to contain the amount of spending,” Marc Short, Pence’s chief of staff, said Tuesday in an interview with Bloomberg Radio. “There’s obviously been a lot of stimulus put in the system over the last couple bills, and so the price tag for us would be that.” The White House and lawmakers are set to intensify talks on a new package of virus-related stimulus this month, after they return to Washington from their Independence Day holiday break. Trump administration officials have eyed a $1 trillion spending cap since at least early June, Bloomberg News reported last month. The House is scheduled to begin its recess by Aug. 3, with the Senate following a week later. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has said he wants Congress to complete work on the next phase of stimulus by then. “By that time table, we want to have a bill on the president’s desk,” Short said. President Donald Trump and senior White House officials have said a payroll tax cut, liability reform, tax incentives for businesses to adapt to the pandemic and a potential back-to-work bonus are priorities for the administration. Short said the White House views liability protections as “essential” for companies to bring workers back and fully re-open the economy. The administration wants to be sure it’s “striking the right balance between income replacement on the one hand, and ensuring that we don’t have excessively high implicit tax rates on the return to work, on the other hand,” Tyler Goodspeed, acting chairman of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers, said in a separate interview with Bloomberg Radio. Implicit tax rates can’t exceed 100%, he said, meaning it can’t be more lucrative for workers to stay at home. But any plan will require “not allowing a big blow to household income,” which is core to the economy, Goodspeed added. Ohio Republican Brad Wenstrup, a member of the House’s tax-writing committee, said the package should address the ability of working parents to find childcare and helping schools to reopen. “We have a shortage of day care providers,” he said in another Bloomberg Radio interview. “I am going to look for incentives for those type of programs.” Congress in March passed a $2.2 trillion pandemic relief program, with carve-outs for small businesses and the airline industry as well as multiple lending programs for corporations and Main Street businesses through the Federal Reserve. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin sent out nearly $1 trillion in the first month after that bill became law, through checks directly to American families, forgivable loans to companies and unemployment insurance. Still, much of that money remains unused. The Treasury Department has yet to disburse any loans from a $25 billion pool for airlines, and most of a $17 billion carve-out for firms deemed critical to national security remains untapped. — With assistance by Erik Wasson, Saleha Mohsin, and Josh Wingrove (Updates with additional remarks from administration official, lawmaker beginning in seventh paragraph) SHARE THIS ARTICLE Share   Tweet   Post   Email Terms of Service  Do Not Sell My Info (California) Trademarks Privacy Policy ©2020 Bloomberg L.P. All Rights Reserved Careers Made in NYC Advertise Ad Choices Contact Us Help
White House Wants Stimulus by August Recess With $1 Trillion Cap By  Jordan Fabian  and  Kevin Cirilli July 7, 2020, 8:32 PM GMT+6:30Updated on July 7, 2020, 9:45 PM GMT+6:30 Payroll tax cut sought, administration wants to curb spending Need to balance income support with work incentives, aide says Polls Reflect Trump's Lack of Leadership: Chatham House Unmute Polls Reflect Trump's Lack of Leadership: Chatham House The White House wants Congress to pass another stimulus package by the first week in August, before lawmakers head home for their annual summer recess, and to keep the cost at $1 trillion or less, according to Vice President Mike Pence’s top aide. “I think we want to make sure that people that are still unemployed or hurting are protected but at the same time, we want to take into consideration the fact the economy is bouncing back and want to try to contain the amount of spending,” Marc Short, Pence’s chief of staff, said Tuesday in an interview with Bloomberg Radio. “There’s obviously been a lot of stimulus put in the system over the last couple bills, and so the price tag for us would be that.” The White House and lawmakers are set to intensify talks on a new package of virus-related stimulus this month, after they return to Washington from their Independence Day holiday break. Trump administration officials have eyed a $1 trillion spending cap since at least early June, Bloomberg News reported last month. The House is scheduled to begin its recess by Aug. 3, with the Senate following a week later. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has said he wants Congress to complete work on the next phase of stimulus by then. “By that time table, we want to have a bill on the president’s desk,” Short said. President Donald Trump and senior White House officials have said a payroll tax cut, liability reform, tax incentives for businesses to adapt to the pandemic and a potential back-to-work bonus are priorities for the administration. Short said the White House views liability protections as “essential” for companies to bring workers back and fully re-open the economy. The administration wants to be sure it’s “striking the right balance between income replacement on the one hand, and ensuring that we don’t have excessively high implicit tax rates on the return to work, on the other hand,” Tyler Goodspeed, acting chairman of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers, said in a separate interview with Bloomberg Radio. Implicit tax rates can’t exceed 100%, he said, meaning it can’t be more lucrative for workers to stay at home. But any plan will require “not allowing a big blow to household income,” which is core to the economy, Goodspeed added. Ohio Republican Brad Wenstrup, a member of the House’s tax-writing committee, said the package should address the ability of working parents to find childcare and helping schools to reopen. “We have a shortage of day care providers,” he said in another Bloomberg Radio interview. “I am going to look for incentives for those type of programs.” Congress in March passed a $2.2 trillion pandemic relief program, with carve-outs for small businesses and the airline industry as well as multiple lending programs for corporations and Main Street businesses through the Federal Reserve. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin sent out nearly $1 trillion in the first month after that bill became law, through checks directly to American families, forgivable loans to companies and unemployment insurance. Still, much of that money remains unused. The Treasury Department has yet to disburse any loans from a $25 billion pool for airlines, and most of a $17 billion carve-out for firms deemed critical to national security remains untapped. — With assistance by Erik Wasson, Saleha Mohsin, and Josh Wingrove (Updates with additional remarks from administration official, lawmaker beginning in seventh paragraph) SHARE THIS ARTICLE Share   Tweet   Post   Email Terms of Service  Do Not Sell My Info (California) Trademarks Privacy Policy ©2020 Bloomberg L.P. All Rights Reserved Careers Made in NYC Advertise Ad Choices Contact Us Help
[deleted]
Welcome! Introductions and basic questions are best addressed in the Introductions community, by clicking Help on the app or desktop, checking out the blogs below, or reading previous answers. Introductions or very basic questions in this community are probably going to get downvoted as they are of less relevance. Trolling for upvotes will definitely get you downvoted quickly and blocked. Don’t do it. Only quality content and commentary will work here. If you are a bot or your “contributions” are functionally indistinguishable from that of a bot, you will get banned. Terse one-word answers or banal commentary will be downvoted because they are irrelevant. You could really be earning off of quality contributions; make sure your contributions are up to that standard. By reading content and providing accurate and insightful commentary or analysis, you can grow your Rep. By betting on which content is likely to be the most relevant, you can earn Coins. It is in your interest to upvote/bet on good content and downvote bad or irrelevant content. Learn More: [https://blog.relevant.community/](https://blog.relevant.community/)
[deleted]
Welcome! Introductions and basic questions are best addressed in the Introductions community, by clicking Help on the app or desktop, checking out the blogs below, or reading previous answers. Introductions or very basic questions in this community are probably going to get downvoted as they are of less relevance. Trolling for upvotes will definitely get you downvoted quickly and blocked. Don’t do it. Only quality content and commentary will work here. If you are a bot or your “contributions” are functionally indistinguishable from that of a bot, you will get banned. Terse one-word answers or banal commentary will be downvoted because they are irrelevant. You could really be earning off of quality contributions; make sure your contributions are up to that standard. By reading content and providing accurate and insightful commentary or analysis, you can grow your Rep. By betting on which content is likely to be the most relevant, you can earn Coins. It is in your interest to upvote/bet on good content and downvote bad or irrelevant content. Learn More: [https://blog.relevant.community/](https://blog.relevant.community/)
Some low-ranking comments may have been hidden.
Some low-ranking comments may have been hidden.