US economy
Revision as of 20:52, 3 January 2007 by Woozle (talk | contribs) (→Commentary: economy vs. majority party: 2 articles)
Overview
This page is a portal for articles and information about various aspects of the United States economy, including:
- The various ways in which the governments allocates and spends money and incurs debt
- Various economic indicators
- Certain kinds of unavoidable expenses which can be improved or worsened by government regulation
- Anything else that seems related
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Terminology
- budget deficit: the amount of money which the United States must borrow in order to meet the federal budget; such borrowing increases the public debt. Opposite of budget surplus.
- budget surplus: the amount of money left over in the federal budget after everything has been allocated. This money can be used to pay off the public debt. (Note: not sure if it automatically does this, or if there are other things that can be done with it.) Opposite of budget deficit.
- public debt: the amount of money owed by the United States federal government to creditors who hold US Debt Instruments. This does not include the money owed by states, corporations, or individuals, nor does it include the money owed to Social Security beneficiaries in the future. Common synonyms include: national debt, gross federal debt, U.S. government debt Creditors charge interest on the public debt, so it increases each year unless there is a budget surplus sufficient to (at least) pay off that year's interest.
- external debt: that portion of the debt of all sectors of the economy (public and private) which is owed to foreigners. Foreign ownership of the public debt is a significant part of the United States's external debt.
A budget deficit increases the public debt; a budget surplus can decrease it, but only if there is still some left over after paying off that year's interest.
Links
Reference
- The Debt To the Penny (currently $8 trillion) from the Bureau of the Public Debt
- graph of the US budget deficit/surplus, 1961-present
- Historical Income Tables - Households 1967-2001: divides income levels into 5 groups, adds in another column for the top 5%, and shows the percentage of the total pie each income range is receiving
- Wikipedia:
Commentary
- 2006-09-19 THE LOW POST: Your Tax Dollars at Work by Matt Taibbi
the economy vs. the majority party
- 2006-03-21 Are Republicans or Democrats Better for the Stock Market? by Jeremy Siegel, Ph.D.
- 2004-01-22 Surprise: Dems are better for rallies by Alexandra Twin, CNN/Money Staff Writer: "Despite 'market friendly' Republican policies, stocks rise more and volatility dips under Democrats."
News
- 2006-03-03 Current Budget Projections (Congressional Budget Office): HTML PDF
- 2005-10-14 US budget deficit shrinks in 2005: "Despite falling from 2004's record $412bn figure, the federal deficit for the fiscal year ending last month was still the third highest on record."
- 2004-12 The US Budget Deficit: On an Unsustainable Path (most of article is in PDF form)
- 2004-10-14 U.S. budget deficit expands to $412.5 billion
- 2004-02-02 Does the US budget deficit matter? (analysis by Steve Schifferes, BBC News Online economics reporter)