Waubonsee Community College

End unemployment now, how to eliminate joblessness, debt, and poverty despite Congress, Ravi Batra

Label
End unemployment now, how to eliminate joblessness, debt, and poverty despite Congress, Ravi Batra
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-232) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
End unemployment now
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
889523290
Responsibility statement
Ravi Batra
Sub title
how to eliminate joblessness, debt, and poverty despite Congress
Summary
"2010 marked the year when the National Bureau of Economic Research declared an end to the Great Recession. The economy had shed over six million jobs in 2008 and 2009, but few had been recalled to work by 2010. Today, government policies have yet to make a significant dent in unemployment. Here, Ravi Batra explores why this is the case. He explains how joblessness can be completely eliminated--in just two years, and without the help of our painfully incompetent Congress. The President and the Federal Reserve have the legal authority to generate free-market conditions that will quickly end the specter of unemployment, all without involving Congress. Some examples of how to end unemployment without congressional intrusion: [bullet] Creating a bank by the FDIC to compete with banking giants and then charging only 5% interest rates on credit card balances, instead of the standard 10-35% seen today [bullet] Banning mergers among large and profitable firms, as such mergers directly cause layoffs and reinforce monopoly capitalism [bullet] Aid to small businesses in the form of cheap loans and government contracts, because small firms have been real job creators since 1980, while Big Business has been a job destroyer [bullet] Offer retiree bonds to increase the incomes of pensioners who live on savings and whose incomes have been practically destroyed by the collapse of interest rates [bullet] Bring oil prices down to $20/barrel, which would lower a gallon of gas to $1.50"--, Provided by publisher"2010 marked the year when the National Bureau of Economic Research declared an end to the Great Recession. The economy had shed over six million jobs in 2008 and 2009, but few had been recalled to work by 2010. Today, government policies have yet to make a significant dent in unemployment. Here, Ravi Batra explores why this is the case. He explains how joblessness can be completely eliminated--in just two years, and without the help of our painfully incompetent Congress. The President and the Federal Reserve have the legal authority to generate free-market conditions that will quickly end the specter of unemployment, all without involving Congress. Some examples of how to end unemployment without congressional intrusion: - Creating a bank by the FDIC to compete with banking giants and then charging only 5% interest rates on credit card balances, instead of the standard 10-35% seen today - Banning mergers among large and profitable firms, as such mergers directly cause layoffs and reinforce monopoly capitalism - Aid to small businesses in the form of cheap loans and government contracts, because small firms have been real job creators since 1980, while Big Business has been a job destroyer - Offer retiree bonds to increase the incomes of pensioners who live on savings and whose incomes have been practically destroyed by the collapse of interest rates - Bring oil prices down to $20/barrel, which would lower a gallon of gas to $1.50"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
The diagnosis : Introduction ; A do-nothing congress ; Unemployment: a curse ; Monopoly capitalism and the theory of free profits ; What really causes unemployment? ; Bubbles are troubles ; Monopoly capitalism and the rising wage gap ; A town hall-style debate -- The cure : Free-market outcomes: banking and finance ; Free-market outcomes: oil and gasoline ; Free-market outcomes: Big Pharma and foreign trade ; Eliminating global poverty ; A free-market manifesto -- Appendix. A new theory of unemployment: globalization and the wage-productivity gap
Content
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