What will you do with your $4,500 check?
As it stands right now, Congress is proposing sending a check for $4,500 to nearly every person in America...
The details have not been finalized at this point, but congress and the president are mulling over the idea of sending nearly every adult and child in America roughly $4,500.
This would be an economic stimulus program to help keep things afloat as the coronavirus wreaks havoc on the global economy.
The exact quote in the New York Times this morning:
"A group of Democratic senators, led by Michael Bennet of Colorado, Cory Booker of New Jersey and Sherrod Brown of Ohio, is pushing Congress to send as much as $4,500 to nearly every adult and child in the United States this year, as part of a sustained government income-support program to counter the economic slowdown."
(Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/17/us/politics/stimulus-package.html)
Will it actually pass, who knows...
But if it does, what will you do with your check?
Buy bitcoin perhaps, or maybe some steem (or HIVE)?
Let me know in the comments section below.
Stay informed my friends.
Image Source:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/17/us/politics/stimulus-package.html
-Doc
Here it comes, I smell freshly printed fiat in the air
Posted via Steemleo
I’ll take the check! I think it’s good for those who can’t work.
Yes, it could be very helpful for a lot of people. It's also another reason why bitcoin matters. Those that have been saving cash watch their money get debased as the stimulus programs roll out.
Are you saying they'll be printing new money for it?
Sorry if that's an obvious question, economics is one of my weaker subjects.
I was assuming, though admittedly I haven't looked into that as of yet. Either way, if it was money that was never intended to go out into the broader economy, and now it is, all things being equal, the purchasing power of all other money should go down.
"...if it was money that was never intended to go out into the broader economy..."
That seems pretty likely. Like I said I'm not too savvy with this stuff, but I can't imagine the government was going to buy consumer goods with it.
It'll be interesting to see what — if anything — actually comes to pass. There is, of course, a precedent of sorts at the state level... the "Alaska Dividend." I mention that mostly because we have a Republican government, and Alaska DOES tend to be a "red state."
If it actually came to pass, $4500 would come close to covering one year of our back property taxes, so that's most likely where it would go. We've been at the edge of "tax foreclosure" for years, so it would be nice to move a little further away from that abyss...
Especially as it says it may be for each person (not each family), which could mean you get that $4,500 x 2 as you kept saying "we".
I'm not holding my breath at this point for this to actually happen, but it sounds like something will be coming. $4,500 seems like an awfully large amount, though the Donald did say he wanted to go "YUGEE".
Trump has shown himself to be in the camp where deficits dont matter. Plus he staked his reelection basically on the stock market and, with it tanking, he is looking at a tougher road.
I have a feeling that figure will have a tough time getting through Congress, especially the Senate.
Posted via Steemleo
The proposal I had heard previously was just for $1000 per household, but even that would be a welcome shot in the arm, given that all the recent uncertainty is already making itself felt.
As a counselor and life coach, my wife's entire livelihood depends on "seeing people," and only a limited number of her clients are willing to have their sessions via Skype or something similar.
I thought there was a stimulus proposal for only $1000 coming out of the senate, specifically from Mitt Romney of all people if I recall.
$3500 is a big difference.
Initially $1k was proposed, but the numbers thrown around today are much larger.
That was the Senate version, this is something proposed by the House.
Posted via Steemleo
And who's gonna pay for that?
Most likely, everyone.
It reduces the buying power of everyone's USD. But still, the economy will be in much worse condition if it was not done. There could be months that restaurants and other public-facing businesses go without any revenue. That could send the US into a depression with increased violent crime, homelessness, starvation and many other problems.
Mexico. Come on. You got to keep up. 😂
Hey @jrcornel:
Here I go doing some math. :)
If we're not talking millionaires (or their spouses and children, if any), and supposing a 2.5 per household average across the board (didn't check for sure but it's been that range within the last five years), of the 327 million plus living in the U.S., 239.5 men, women and children would receive a check.
At $4,500 a pop, that's a ginormous $1.07775 trillion.
Nice to have if it were truly free money and didn't come with some hefty strings attached, as in, who's going to ultimately pay for it? The same folks getting it, you and me, except we'll also owe for kids, many of which aren't of working age and won't be for quite a while. :)
Exactly. They will deposit it into banks and with fractional reserve lending that 1 trillion balloons into 9 trillion for the banks. Funny how that works.
Hey, @sepracore.
The one $1,000 amount I guess Trump, his administration or Senator Romney (one of them) has proposed would be a little under $250 billion, and just come to adults in a household. Not sure if $1,000 does a whole lot, though. You reach the point of diminishing returns in either direction, up or down. :)
Thank you so much for this heads up. I have not been tuning into this stuff lately. Trying to get work done.
Yes I could buy some crypto. 😁
And TP 💩
How much are they putting toward hospital beds, ventilators, test kits, and other measures to control the public health crisis before instead spending it on mitigating the impact on the economy and the stock market? I personally could use the cash, but it seems that the best thing for the economy in the long term is to control the pandemic in the short term.
To collapse the healthcare system and allow thousands more than necessary to fall seriously ill and/or die is enormously expensive in addition to being ethically unconscionable. Unless of course it's a cynical calculation of whether voters in November will remember how many ventilators were purchased vs. how big of a bribe/stimulus check they got from Uncle Sam.
Sorry if that sounds a little dark and paranoid, but every time I've thought "that's going too far" about this guy, that's exactly where he's gone. Hoping very much that I am wrong.