One gold coin for every American family
If American families are smart (and if they are able), they'll take
that $1,200 check coming from the gubment and buy a single one-ounce
American Eagle gold coin. Now that monetary policy and fiscal policy
appear to be firing on all cylinders, it will probably be one of the
easiest and best decisions they'll ever make - the only real question
is whether or not $1,200 will be enough by the time the checks arrive
in May.
Following on the heels of the Federal Reserve's three-quarter point
cut in short-term interest rates on Tuesday, with another half-point
cut scheduled for next week, Congress acted earlier today by
completing work on a $150 billion economic bailout plan that will see
checks of $1,200 or more arriving in the mailboxes of almost 120
million families.
Oh yeah, they're going to raise the loan limits for Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac too, so the gubment can shoulder more of the liability for
the nation's floundering housing market.
It's an election year, it all makes perfect sense.
According to this AP report, now that the Dems are large and in
charge, almost 30 percent of the tax rebates will actually go to
people who do not pay taxes. Non-taxpayers will get $300 and those
individuals who actually do pay income taxes will get up to $600,
working couples will get $1,200, and families with children will
receive an additional $300 per child under the plan.
It's not clear why they continue to call them "rebate checks" since,
in many cases, it is nothing more than a give-away - almost like money
falling from the sky.
Business tax incentives worth $50 million round out the plan that
disappointed more than a few elected officials because it did not
include an extension of unemployment benefits or an increase in food
stamps.
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., agreed to drop both of these elements from the
plan in exchange for getting checks of $300 into the hands of people
who don't pay taxes.
"I can't say that I'm totally pleased with the package, but I do know
that it will help stimulate the economy. But if it does not, then
there will be more to come," Pelosi said.
That's good to know.
Once again, if you are able and if the gubment bailout money still
covers the cost when your check arrives, just buy one ounce of gold,
stick it away in a sock drawer and forget about it.
Someday, years from now, pull it out and tell your friends, "This is
the gold coin I bought with that first government bailout check in
2008. It's worth [fill in the blank] now."
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