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NaturalPedia > Deficit Spending
Quotes about Deficit Spending from the world's top natural health / natural living authors
E. D. Hirsch, Joseph F. Kett, James Trefil (See book keywords and concepts)
Also called deficit spending. deflation A decrease in prices, often stated as an increase in the value of money, related to a decline in spending by consumers. (Compare inflation.) demand The amount of any given commodity that people are ready and able to buy at a given time for a given price. (See supply and demand.) demand curve A mathematical curve, drawn on a graph, that represents what the demand for a commodity would be if its price ranged anywhere from zero to infinity.
| Christopher Cerf and Victor S. Navasky (See book keywords and concepts)
News & World Report, August 14,1978
"We now know that inflation results from all that deficit spending."
—Ronald Reagan (President of the United States), announcing a plan to curb inflation by eliminating the federal deficit within three years,
February 5, 1981
"[A] drastic reduction in the deficit... will take place in the fiscal year
'82."62
—Ronald Reagan, news conference, quoted in The New York Times,
March 6,1981
• =" In fiscal 1982, the first full year of the Reagan Presidency, the government ran up a record budget deficit of $ 110.
| Hank Trisler (See book keywords and concepts)
The Protein Paradox protein requires more energy to be used as it is processed than it furnishes; consuming more dietary protein than your body needs results in physiological deficit spending.
A lot of energy is used to metabolize protein and prepare its waste for elimination. Processing any food increases metabolic activity; protein excites greater activity for longer periods than do carbohydrates. When substantial amounts of carbohydrates are processed, your metabolic rate increases about four per cent.
| E. D. Hirsch (See book keywords and concepts)
Republican administrations generally work to balance the budget, while Democratic administrations tend to encourage deficit spending, undet certain conditions, to stimulate the economy through federally supported programs. Obvious measures to balance the budget (raising taxes and cutting federal programs) are unpopular. Presidents often resort to selling bonds from the Department of the Treasury to the public and to the Federal Reserve in order to finance the deficit.
Democratic party One of the two major political parties in the United States.
Also called deficit spending. deflation A decrease in prices, often stated as an increase in the value of money, related to a decline in spending by consumers. (Compare inflation.) demand The amount of any given commodity that people are ready and able to buy at a given time for a given price. (See supply and demand.) demand curve A mathematical curve, drawn on a graph, that represents what the demand for a commodity would be if its price ranged anywhere from zero to infinity.
| G. Edward Griffin (See book keywords and concepts)
Opposition may be tolerated if directed to lesser parts of the mechanism, such as "Communist subversion," or "corruption in public office," or "high taxes," or "deficit spending." But let an organization take aim at the prime mover behind all of these manifestations—the concept of big government itself—and it will know the wrath of the cartel finpols, the Communists, the neo-Nazis, the faceless bureaucratic elite, and all other would-be masters of the American people.
| James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch (See book keywords and concepts)
Also called deficit spending. deflation A decrease in prices, often stated as an increase in the value of money, related to a decline in spending by consumers. (Compare inflation.) demand The amount of any given commodity that people are ready and able to buy at a given time for a given price. (See supply and demand.) demand curve A mathematical curve, drawn on a graph, that represents what the demand for a commodity would be if its price ranged anywhere from zero to infinity.
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