Chinaunix首页 | 论坛 | 博客
  • 博客访问: 190357
  • 博文数量: 260
  • 博客积分: 0
  • 博客等级: 民兵
  • 技术积分: 2922
  • 用 户 组: 普通用户
  • 注册时间: 2013-10-02 22:06
文章分类

全部博文(260)

文章存档

2014年(57)

2013年(203)

我的朋友

分类: 其他平台

2013-10-12 18:09:16

The statement: World War II, we had 10 million come home all at once. But what did we do then? There were some of the liberals back then that said, we have to have more work programs and do this and that. And they thought they would have to do everything conceivable for those 10 million. They never got around to it because they came home so quickly. And you know what the government did? They cut the budget by 60%. They cut taxes by 30%. By that time, the debt had been liquidated. And everybody went back to work again, you didn need any special programs. facts: The end of World War II did see a sharp decrease in federal spending as the United States demobilized. budget grew nearly tenfold between 1940 and 1945, peaking at about $93 billion $1.2 trillion in today dollars. By 1948, it had fallen to $30 billion, or about a third of 1945 outlays, according to federal records.

Taxes went down as well during that period, though rates stayed high. The top tax rate in 1945 was 94%. The rate was cut to 91% by 1948, and the threshold for paying that rate went up from about $200,000 to more than 1.8 million in current dollars, according to the Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan Washington research group.

4 bank as crisis deepens

MADRID (AP) Spain government will effectively nationalize the nation fourth largest bank to shore up the hurting banking sector and try to convince investors the country doesn need a bailout like those taken by Greece, Ireland and Portugal, the Economy Ministry said Wednesday.

Under the deal, (euro) 4.5 billion ($5.9 billion) in funding that Bankia SA received from Spain in 2010 and 2011 will be converted into shares of the institution parent company, the ministry said in a statement.

On Friday, the government is expected to announce a more wideranging banking system overhaul to free up frozen credit as Spain weathers a recession and 24.4 percent unemployment the worst jobless rate among the 17 nations that use the euro.

Bankia faces the heaviest exposure among Spain banks to bad property loans caused by a construction boom that went bust, and holds (euro) 34 billion in problematic loans.

The government decision to assume control of the bank came after Bankia directors approved the plan and nervous investors sent Spanish government bond yields soaring and stocks plunging. They are concerned Spain may be forced to ask for a bailout.

Spain will get 45 percent of Bankia under the deal and "will acquire control," the ministry said.

The statement called the move "a necessary first step to ensure solvency, the tranquility of the depositors and to dispel the doubts of the markets on the capital needs of the entity."

Hours before the announcement, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy dodged a question on whether Bankia would be nationalized but tried to reassure the 10 million Spaniards who have accounts with Bankia and said Friday additional reforms "will help solve a lot of Spain problems."

Spain goal is to give incentives for Spanish banks largely frozen out of international capital markets to again start giving credit to hurting businesses and consumers caught up in a bleak economy expected to contract 1.7 percent this year, Rajoy said.

"We know the situation is difficult, we know what we have to do and we will do it," Rajoy said in Portugal.

The yield on the benchmark Spanish 10year bonds rose Friday to 6.06 percent, a jump of 0.28 percentage points on the day and uncomfortably high. Bond yields indicate the rate the government borrows at when it taps financial markets. Rates of above 7 percent are seen as unsustainable, and forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal to ask for bailouts.

Beyond Spain banking problems, the market jitters were also due to a political crisis in Greece, where elections on Sunday were inconclusive. Political parties in Athens have so far been unable to form a governing coalition, meaning the country may have to hold new elections.

Investors worry that so much uncertainty could jeopardize the country international bailout program, leaving Greece insolvent and even in the worstcase scenario abandoning the euro currency bloc.

The fears have caused turmoil in the financial markets of the weakest economies in Europe. Italy stocks plunged, and the country the 10year bond yield rose 0.21 percentage points to 5.57 percent.

In Spain, attention the rest of the week will remain on the banks and the government new measures.

Bankia shares fell 5.8 percent on Wednesday before the announcement, the company third straight day of heavy losses, while the broader market in Madrid closed down 2.8 percent.

3

阅读(103) | 评论(0) | 转发(0) |
给主人留下些什么吧!~~