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Contents

Job Opening
June 29th, 2009

Public Records Access Request
June 16th, 2009

The Earth Machine Now Available
March 3rd, 2009

Dog needs help to walk again...
October 8th, 2008

Crashed Before One Mile Of Travel
June 19th, 2008

Common Use of Questionable Study Habits
May 5th, 2008

No Green Policy for UF Greek Houses
April 8th, 2008

No slow-down in new student housing market
April 8th, 2008

Graduate School or Job?
April 8th, 2008

International Gators - The Process
April 7th, 2008

The Future Train
April 7th, 2008

Can You Dig It?
March 14th, 2008

Gators 9/11 Truth Workshop
February 18th, 2008

Sock Hop a Big Hit in High Springs
February 17th, 2008

Another Political Prosecution in Alabama
February 6th, 2008

City of Alachua Commission Agenda
January 28th, 2008

Transient Wisdom
January 26th, 2008

Medicare For All via H.R. 676
January 4th, 2008

Hero & Villan Awards 2007
January 4th, 2008

Change is about policies-not speeches and symbolism
January 4th, 2008

Home Country
December 26th, 2007

Home Country
December 19th, 2007

Home Country
December 12th, 2007

Home Country
December 5th, 2007

A Private School for Newberry/Bronson Area
December 3rd, 2007

More

Transient Wisdom

Transient Wisdom

Peter Rebmann

When I heard Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke tell Congress to leave infrastructure spending out of their economic stimulus package, my heart sank. I've been arguing for years that infrastructure spending, especially for new and improved schools, is exactly what we need to keep our social and economic momentum going.

I guess I should have saved my breath. When the Fed Chairman says forget spending on schools and roads and such, then that's the end of that. Sometimes you have to know when you're beat.

To say that short-term corporate thinking now prevails at the highest levels of government only belabors the obvious. When everyone from the Fed Chairman down to the President agrees so quickly on a short-term solution to a major economic crisis, then something more is at work.

We are entering an age of transient wisdom. It seems our collective intelligence can only function long enough to quickly grasp some nearby consensus on how to cope with a looming crisis. It then collapses in exhaustion and leaves us to our normal public dialogue of bellowing at major television news personalities who bellow at each other and at lessor personalities.

In such an age, Easter Bunny economics make perfect sense. What could be clearer than the vision of joyful taxpayers waking up to find a tax rebate in their mailbox and rushing off to spend it? How could our transient wisdom fail to grasp such a vision?

If this is indeed the way we are headed, then I intend to go with the flow. In fact, I have my own modest suggestion to make which will both complement and enhance the tax rebate solution to our economic woes.

Simply put, my proposal is to reduce the current standard forty hour workweek to thirty-two hours. The rationale for this is to give people time to spend their rebate money.

The fatal flaw in the rebate scheme is it assumes taxpayers will have time to spend their free money. In fact, most people barely have time to spend the money they earn let alone any bonus money that shows up. What with jobs, families, rush hour traffic, household chores and reality TV, there's barely time for mandatory shopping let alone discretionary shopping.

A thirty two-hour workweek will fix all that. That extra eight hours a week will give people everywhere time to get out and spend their rebates.

Of course hourly pay will have to increase to maintain everyone's current spending level. And benefits will have to remain the same so people won't feel uneasy about them. But these are technical issues; the main thing is to free up time so people can shop.

The real beauty of this suggestion is that federal agencies can implement it immediately with their own employees. Quick action by Congress is all that takes.

In this new age of transient wisdom, quibbling over things like inflation, labor costs and productivity can be safely ignored. The main thing is to generate the fleeting consensus needed to make the change and get the job done.

So contact your local Federal Reserve Bank without delay and demand that they act on the thirty-two hour workweek immediately. Call them now, time is of the essence.

Under Easter Bunny economics, our motto is; if it feels good, buy it. In the age of transient wisdom, we say goodbye to things like open roads and adequate schools. But, if we move fast, we may get some enjoyable compensation to make up for them.

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