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美国借钱买来的经济复苏

(2016-03-06 06:42:08) 下一个

【注:这是一个月前在时坛的一个帖子,留个底。原来是“揭短帖子”,不过当时就说了:“揭短属揭短,美国还是极其强大的一个国家,在大多数领域和整体都比中国强。不是强一点,而是强一大截,中国跟美国平起平坐的时候,本坛的大师们估计也见不到了。“

美国尽管问题诸多,分化剧烈,但很富,简单说一平均就上去了,也就是说”综合“财富和国力都无可比拟,在世界上遥遥领先,说是实力,在某种程度上反映了美国系统、制度的强大优越性。多多学习,是应该的。】

 

美国上上下下没人担心政府债务,托联储的福,利率基本是零。债务在美国人心里是很正常的,至于政府借钱,大家都有“跟我无关”的感觉。确实,中国老百姓觉得很多东西不是自己的,美国老百姓倒好,觉得自己借的钱不用自己还,天经地义之事儿。

美国经济号称全球最好,用脑子的人暗暗说,那是说我们在一大堆破烂里是最好的。

奥巴马尽管在国内民意中分歧大,但他自己是轰轰的,觉得自己救了美国,也就救了世界,但是他从来不说怎么救的:

http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user5/imageroot/2016/02/01/total%20debt%202.1.2016_2.jpg

(点击放大)

总债务增加了近80%,借钱买来的。

美国总产值:奥巴马在任升了3.6万亿,值了。

不过,继承美国人民的美德,这债吗,总统得担当;总统说,我马上就不是总统了,所以不是我的。

 

话说回来,揭短属揭短,美国还是极其强大的一个国家,在大多数领域和整体都比中国强。不是强一点,而是强一大截,中国跟美国平起平坐的时候,本坛的大师们估计也见不到了。

 

Fact Check: Is It Obama's Fault That Poverty Has Grown?

奥巴马任内贫困线尽管微增0.2%,但那将近是六百万人。

More children living in poverty now than during recession

"About 22% of children in the U.S. lived below the poverty line in 2013, compared with 18% in 2008, the foundation's 2015 Kids Count Data Book reported. In 2013"

 

Food Stamps Still Feed One in Seven Americans Despite Recovery

这是个揭短集锦图:

http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user3303/imageroot/2015/09/20150916_obo.jpg

 

《华尔街日报》2016.01.23

Thriving U.S. Cities Grapple With Homelessness Surge
Gentrification fuels growth in once-depressed districts, adding to pressure on shelters

 

SAN FRANCISCO—The technology boom has rapidly gentrified some neighborhoods here, pushing wealthy buyers and renters into once-gritty areas and generating friction over the city’s entrenched homeless population. Now, tension is mounting as the Bay Area prepares to host Super Bowl 50 next month, bringing an estimated one million football fans to parts of the city where the unsheltered often congregate and sleep.

Advocates said city officials are trying to move homeless people out of prominent areas around the planned festivities—including two blocks of downtown’s main thoroughfare, Market Street, and the Justin Herman Plaza near the city’s Embarcadero, where homeless often congregate near the waterfront—into a new shelter. The mayor’s office says it isn’t planning any such move.

As once derelict or sleepy downtown districts in U.S. cities evolve into thriving hot spots, officials are grappling with what to do about homeless populations that have long inhabited them. The tension is “all over the country,” said James Wright, a sociology professor at the University of Central Florida who has researched the issue. “Its major effect is just to displace them to other places in the city.”

In the U.S. as a whole, the number of homeless people declined roughly 11% to 564,708 in 2015, from 637,077 in 2010, according to data from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. But in several cities, the figures are growing. In New York, the homeless population increased nearly 42% to 75,323 from 53,187. In Seattle, it grew 12% to 10,122 from 9,022. HUD’s figures include both sheltered homeless—those living in shelters or transitional housing—and unsheltered homeless—those living on the street, in cars or other unsuitable places.

While city officials, who often support redevelopment, face added pressure from new residents to address homelessness, advocates for the unsheltered say the response too often is to try to remove them from sight without providing adequate support.

Homelessness has become a hot-button issue in recent years, and the problem has afflicted mayors across the political spectrum, said Nan Roman, president of the National Alliance to End Homelessness. The mayors of New York and Los Angeles have made it a priority; Portland and Seattle declared states of emergency to tackle it. Though the roots of the clashes vary, a common theme runs through many: The conflict between established homeless populations and new residents drawn by redevelopment.


Experts say a variety of factors fuel homelessness. Incomes aren’t keeping pace with rising rents in some high-price markets, and demand for affordable housing far outstrips supply, according to a 2015 study by the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. In 2013, there were only 34 affordable units in the U.S. for every 100 extremely low-income renters, those earning 30% of the median in the area, the study found.

Among the reasons for the shortfall: limited profit potential for developers building low-cost housing and declining federal appropriations for programs that subsidize construction of affordable units, according to the study. Federal, state and local programs aimed at securing permanent housing for certain groups, such as veterans and the chronically homeless, have helped bring down the number of homeless people nationally, experts said.

The tension in San Francisco has led to allegations that the city is looking to move its homeless out of trendy areas. That is what “municipalities like to do when they have big events, ... try to create this fairyland where no poor people are present,” said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the city’s Coalition on Homelessness.

Christine Falvey, a spokeswoman for Mayor Ed Lee, said the city has no plan for a crackdown and has stepped up efforts to end homelessness by getting people into permanent housing. Last year, the mayor received widespread criticism after issuing what appeared to sound to some advocates as an ultimatum to homeless camping downtown. Ms. Falvey said those comments were taken out of context, adding that Mr. Lee “knows people are suffering on our streets, and he wants to bring people indoors.”

In Miami, where downtown has become an increasingly vibrant area, the homeless population has crept up since 2013. The city’s Downtown Development Authority, which promotes the area, sparred last year with the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust over how best to tackle the issue.

One of the sleeping areas with over 460 beds at the Peachtree-Pine shelter in Atlanta.

One of the sleeping areas with over 460 beds at the Peachtree-Pine shelter in Atlanta

Ronald Book, chairman of the homeless trust, said a DDA plan to provide mats for homeless people at a nearby shelter was merely an attempt to sweep them from the street—a claim Alyce Robertson, executive director of the DDA, denied. As the dispute grew heated, the DDA created a detailed “poop map” showing where human feces, presumably from homeless people, was spotted on downtown streets.

The two sides recently reached a truce. The DDA abandoned the mat idea, and the homeless trust struck an agreement with the city and county to fund an additional 158 beds at two homeless support centers. Separately, the city and the DDA launched a mobile toilet program for homeless people, dubbed “Pit Stop,” that has reduced human waste on downtown streets by 57% in the past six months, according to the DDA.

In Tulsa, Okla., where the formerly moribund downtown has received more than $1 billion of investment, restaurants, bars and loft apartments now dot the area. “The homeless in Tulsa are no longer out of sight, out of mind,” said Eric Costanzo, associate pastor at First Baptist Church of Tulsa, which runs service centers for homeless people in the city.

As a result of friction between business owners and homeless people, a group of city agencies, nonprofit organizations and others launched a program last year called Zero: 2016 Tulsa that aims to eliminate chronic homelessness in the city by the end of this year.

Another fight is brewing in Atlanta, where a four-story homeless shelter sits amid a building boom in Midtown and downtown that is drawing new residents and businesses. Mayor Kasim Reed has vowed to shut it down, arguing it is a magnet for drugs, disease and crime and does little to help the homeless.

Shelter board members say he is trying to push homeless people out of an increasingly chic area along Peachtree Street, the city’s main drag, at the behest of business leaders. “They want us dead and gone,” said Charles Steffen, one of the board members. Backers of the facility say it is serving Atlanta’s most-desperate people and needs to stay open near the city center so the homeless have access to public transportation and other services.

The Peachtree-Pine shelter in Atlanta serves 575 homeless nightly on average and is facing the realities of an increasingly hostile city where property values are rising and luxury high rises are being erected a few blocks away.

The Peachtree-Pine shelter in Atlanta serves 575 homeless nightly on average and is facing the realities of an increasingly hostile city where property values are rising and luxury high rises are being erected a few blocks away


Business leaders believe the large facility should be closed and that smaller shelters more focused on providing services should be the city’s answer to homelessness. “There is no support for big shelters,” said A.J. Robinson, president of Central Atlanta Progress, a business group.

The fight has triggered multiple lawsuits, as the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless, which has run the facility since 1997, tries to ensure it stays open.

One recent day, hundreds of homeless people gathered in the shelter and on nearby streets. Piles of clothes and food littered the sidewalk. “It’s been getting tough around here,” said Rodney Quisenberry, a 53-year-old man who said he has been homeless for years because of drug addiction and depression. “You can’t just close this down.”

Mr. Reed is determined to do just that, using eminent domain if necessary to take control of the shelter. He said only a court order will stop him. “A judge is going to have to tell me no,” he said.

 

 

 

 

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评论
smeagolrocks 回复 悄悄话 能用借的钱掙钱才牛B
X723 回复 悄悄话 問題在於為什大家都要朝一條"要沉的美國船"上擠?别人向望美國夢還情有可愿.可是花好桃好的中國天朝人朝美國鑽就令人百思不解?難道天朝並非花好桃好?或者唱衰美國為自硬留在美國找點理由?
靈小抓 回复 悄悄话 非常畅销的好书 人类简史 中提到过一个有意思的观点:资本主义的定义就是用credit, 用未来的钱。
万得福 回复 悄悄话 '借钱就是本事',这世界发展到这地步,也就到头了。呵呵。泡沫没有不破的
mike33 回复 悄悄话 有钱人才借得到钱,借钱赚钱就是本事。
tina0 回复 悄悄话 美国经济,也可以说整个现代经济,都是建立在借贷基础之上的,否则就还是农耕经济。借贷并没有错,不借贷,经济就不可能取得快速发展。 关键是管理好借贷,有能力控制借贷的规模和归还借贷。
开工厂 回复 悄悄话 我倒了 世界就完了
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