Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Just sold my last CA property
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March 7, 2010 at 10:06 AM #523027March 7, 2010 at 10:14 AM #522103air_ogiParticipant
You lost me at AB32.
How is keeping carbon emissions at 1990 levels going to cause skyrocketing electricity prices?
It’s pretty silly trying to predict long term economic patterns when you can’t even get the impact of the single legislation right.
March 7, 2010 at 10:14 AM #522243air_ogiParticipantYou lost me at AB32.
How is keeping carbon emissions at 1990 levels going to cause skyrocketing electricity prices?
It’s pretty silly trying to predict long term economic patterns when you can’t even get the impact of the single legislation right.
March 7, 2010 at 10:14 AM #522679air_ogiParticipantYou lost me at AB32.
How is keeping carbon emissions at 1990 levels going to cause skyrocketing electricity prices?
It’s pretty silly trying to predict long term economic patterns when you can’t even get the impact of the single legislation right.
March 7, 2010 at 10:14 AM #522773air_ogiParticipantYou lost me at AB32.
How is keeping carbon emissions at 1990 levels going to cause skyrocketing electricity prices?
It’s pretty silly trying to predict long term economic patterns when you can’t even get the impact of the single legislation right.
March 7, 2010 at 10:14 AM #523032air_ogiParticipantYou lost me at AB32.
How is keeping carbon emissions at 1990 levels going to cause skyrocketing electricity prices?
It’s pretty silly trying to predict long term economic patterns when you can’t even get the impact of the single legislation right.
March 7, 2010 at 10:29 AM #522108peterbParticipantI think you’re right about AZ being a better bet. Cheaper and easier to do business. But the demographics for the whole country are not good. Many states are in severe fiscal imbalance.
Global wage arbitrage for most employment sectors is alive and well. High unemployment and tapped-out credit lines in both the private and public sectors means that everything has to recalibrate downward.
March 7, 2010 at 10:29 AM #522247peterbParticipantI think you’re right about AZ being a better bet. Cheaper and easier to do business. But the demographics for the whole country are not good. Many states are in severe fiscal imbalance.
Global wage arbitrage for most employment sectors is alive and well. High unemployment and tapped-out credit lines in both the private and public sectors means that everything has to recalibrate downward.
March 7, 2010 at 10:29 AM #522684peterbParticipantI think you’re right about AZ being a better bet. Cheaper and easier to do business. But the demographics for the whole country are not good. Many states are in severe fiscal imbalance.
Global wage arbitrage for most employment sectors is alive and well. High unemployment and tapped-out credit lines in both the private and public sectors means that everything has to recalibrate downward.
March 7, 2010 at 10:29 AM #522778peterbParticipantI think you’re right about AZ being a better bet. Cheaper and easier to do business. But the demographics for the whole country are not good. Many states are in severe fiscal imbalance.
Global wage arbitrage for most employment sectors is alive and well. High unemployment and tapped-out credit lines in both the private and public sectors means that everything has to recalibrate downward.
March 7, 2010 at 10:29 AM #523037peterbParticipantI think you’re right about AZ being a better bet. Cheaper and easier to do business. But the demographics for the whole country are not good. Many states are in severe fiscal imbalance.
Global wage arbitrage for most employment sectors is alive and well. High unemployment and tapped-out credit lines in both the private and public sectors means that everything has to recalibrate downward.
March 7, 2010 at 11:38 AM #522128poorgradstudentParticipantCalifornia’s consitution needs to be rewritten. Anytime the public can mandate spending with a simple majority but needs more than a majority to approve a tax increase, you’re headed for fiscal disaster. Prop 13 was a well intentioned problem maker, and CA has so many mandated spending programs the general fund has no real flexibility.
It will be interesting to see if Arnold can reform the prison system. Those on the right would love to break the union, and those of us on the left would like to see a shrinkage of the prison-industrial complex. There’s definitely room to cut spending in a way that has broad public appeal.
March 7, 2010 at 11:38 AM #522267poorgradstudentParticipantCalifornia’s consitution needs to be rewritten. Anytime the public can mandate spending with a simple majority but needs more than a majority to approve a tax increase, you’re headed for fiscal disaster. Prop 13 was a well intentioned problem maker, and CA has so many mandated spending programs the general fund has no real flexibility.
It will be interesting to see if Arnold can reform the prison system. Those on the right would love to break the union, and those of us on the left would like to see a shrinkage of the prison-industrial complex. There’s definitely room to cut spending in a way that has broad public appeal.
March 7, 2010 at 11:38 AM #522704poorgradstudentParticipantCalifornia’s consitution needs to be rewritten. Anytime the public can mandate spending with a simple majority but needs more than a majority to approve a tax increase, you’re headed for fiscal disaster. Prop 13 was a well intentioned problem maker, and CA has so many mandated spending programs the general fund has no real flexibility.
It will be interesting to see if Arnold can reform the prison system. Those on the right would love to break the union, and those of us on the left would like to see a shrinkage of the prison-industrial complex. There’s definitely room to cut spending in a way that has broad public appeal.
March 7, 2010 at 11:38 AM #522798poorgradstudentParticipantCalifornia’s consitution needs to be rewritten. Anytime the public can mandate spending with a simple majority but needs more than a majority to approve a tax increase, you’re headed for fiscal disaster. Prop 13 was a well intentioned problem maker, and CA has so many mandated spending programs the general fund has no real flexibility.
It will be interesting to see if Arnold can reform the prison system. Those on the right would love to break the union, and those of us on the left would like to see a shrinkage of the prison-industrial complex. There’s definitely room to cut spending in a way that has broad public appeal.
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