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Sunday, April 05, 2009
Kevin McCullough :: Townhall.com Columnist
Why Risk Threatens Obama
by Kevin McCullough
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President Obama has dug himself into an even deeper hole in his attempt to deliver on key campaign promises. Just in February and March alone (two months solely on his watch) he has presided over a record breaking nearly 2 million additional unemployed persons than when he took office. The national unemployment rate now surging well past 8.5% (double that of the majority of Bush’s two terms), Obama's unemployment percentage is the highest in 25 years, and his total of unemployed persons at over 13 million is a gross number that exceeds the 11 million plus of the depression era.

If President Obama inherited the greatest recession since the Great Depression, his policies, lack of action, and wrong headed decisions have now surged the nation passed it.

In pointing this out, a commenter on my blog this past week chided me, "it might take more than 72 days to fix it."

No one doubts that.

But fundamentally I can assert to you that Obama's policies have worsened the matter, and we are still only at the tip of the iceberg in terms of where his Titanic-type view of the economy is leading us.

You only need to understand a single word to be able to grasp the full concept: elasticity.

It is what Obama's policies lack, and without it there will be no foreseeable recovery for the economy for some time. Without it, Obama's trends on unemployment, consumer confidence, and economic recovery will stagnate--and that isn't going to help anyone.

But what do I mean?

Elastic is this fantastic quality found in rubber. Those who use rubber bands for anything as small as bunching things together or as large as bungee jumping from a bridge at several hundred feet understand its value. It is able to stretch, sometimes to the point where other substances would easily break, and as quickly as it had stretched it is able to recoil and return to its original state.

It is precisely the lack of elasticity in America's economy that will continue to give us high unemployment, low production, and poor quality.

But why is that important?

Pay attention here.

Elastic “conditions” (federal tax policies) encourage business owners, patent holders, and idea generators--to engage in risk, set up companies, hire people, and attempt to create, produce, or distribute goods and services. The economic elasticity comes in the form of sacrifice the individual idea generator, patent holder, or business owner is willing to engage in. Sometimes they will mortgage their home, sell off all their goods, and risk everything on the confidence of their idea. Understanding that the onus of their success rests upon their own shoulders they engage in the level of risk or sacrifice that they are comfortable with, in the hopes of producing far more than what they originally put at risk in the first place.

Risk is the currency in an elastic economy. It says to someone who has an idea for a product, "Do you think you can actually pull this thing off?"

Traditionally in economies where America has thrived, we have made it our business as a society to reward those who take the risk. We do this through tax incentives on invention, business development, hiring workers, and increasing production.

Engaging in risk does not benefit everyone who engages in it, and many lessons have been learned by society and the individuals who have failed to become the success their original idea had given them the hope of. Continued...

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About The Author
Kevin McCullough is the nationally syndicated host of "'Xtreme' Radio and columnist based in New York. He blogs at www.muscleheadrevolution.com. His second book "The Kind Of MAN Every Man SHOULD Be" is in stores now.

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Doc D - Really?
"McCullough uses this odd "elasticity" concept for describing supposedly healthy economies, which somehow promotes more risk taking. I'll admit I'm no economist"

This is where you should have stopped, done a quick Wikki search and then proceeded.

Price elasticity is the measure of the change in demand for a good or service that results from a change in price. Price goes up, demand goes down and the contrary is also true. Now in the context of this article, risk is tax. Higher taxes, just like higher risk, make it less likely that an economic activity will result in the necessary return required to induce individuals to engage in that activity. More simply stated, risk-reward. Why would someone, anyone, assume risk without reward, pecuniary or otherwise?

Now I am new here, but I am not new to the planet, so Dr D, please in the future do not respond without first doing a minimum level research or giving a minimum level of thought to your responses.

Thank you in advance.

Denise:
I agree with all of this. But ...

We also executed child molesters when they were caught. If not when caught, then later after they were tried and convicted. Now it isn't possible. We are depriving them of their 'rights'.

We didn't have the government adding things to our house water coming from the hose.

We didn't have to worry about being sued if a kid slipping on our grass and scraped his knee.

We didn't have the government mandating how to raise a child.

I don't really think we've progressed much. If anything, we've gone backward.
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