tv Boom Bust RT October 10, 2017 8:29pm-9:01pm EDT
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only to get situation. from. going to come. from. did i say comedy gold i'm not saying by the corporate. would you go after the corporations that just more your live profit over people at term. or death it's not for me it's like medicine it's like an antidote for all the stress that the new splitted wonder redacted tonight is a show where you can go to cry from laughing about the stuff that's going on in the world as opposed to just regular crying we're going to find out what the corporate mainstream media is not telling you about how we're going to filter it through some
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satirical comedic lenses to make it more digestible that's what we do every week hard hitting radical comedy news like redacted tonight is where it's. lindsey francis is boom bust broadcasting around the world from washington d.c. tonight the international monetary fund releases its growth projections for two thousand and seventeen india thinks china is set to rise we take a closer look around the world also denmark it sets relax its laws regarding the sharing economy or at least create a few the government is warming to the idea of collecting big taxes on this new form of consumerism instead of running it out of town for lack of regulatory control also my gas former u.s. attorney commissioner bart chilton has the lowdown on taxes can washington get it done this year he is set to tell us said stand by the boss starts right now.
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my. theory economy giants like air b.n. b. and uber could see the way paved for them right into the heart of northern europe the danish government has decided to stop fighting this change in consumerism and instead embrace it by adjusting its labor and tax laws according to the business ministry about one fifth of danes have either offered or consume the kinds of services provided by uber and air b.n. b. and that is set to increase business minister brian mickelson says if you want people to understand the prospects in terms of new jobs new technology then it also has to contribute to the financing of the welfare society we live in. a lack of tax
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implications for private citizens renting out their homes through the air b.n. b. online service is of particular concern to denmark also there are no business operation licenses or requirements to be met as a landlord new legislation there includes allowing homeowners to rent their properties for at least ninety days a year along with an optional tax program sharing services in housing and transportation was worth more than one hundred million dollars in two thousand and fifteen according to the government. a december interest rate hike may be up for debate by some people it may be set in stone for others or even just downright unlikely but what certainly is up in the air right now is the board of governors badge of talent it shallow and the recruiting must begin in earnest some say it's got a strong start please welcome danielle de martino president of money strong and
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author of fed up an insider's take on why the federal reserve is bad for america i got to start off with parental quarrels what's your take on him entering into this fray well look coral's his name has been vetted and that it at this point it was kind of ridiculous in my mind at least that the senate was holding up this full blown confirmation and i don't think lindsey that it was any coincidence at all that the senate pushed him through on the same exact day that the white house finally released its formal short list of candidates to replace or not replace yellen at the end of her term come february and it was just as if a miracle a cloud had parted in the sky and boom coral's was in so i think that was the senate holding the white house's feet to the fire on that one ok well right now there's let's talk about two other potential candidates for the fed kevin powell between the two if you had to choose which one seems to be the better choice to replace channing yellen. well they're both extremely qualified candidates but i
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will revert back to my hero and that's hard for me to say my hero in the one hundred plus years of federal reserve history and that is william mcchesney martin he served for the longest time of any chairman including alan greenspan he served as a private in the united states army he acted as a liaison between the soviet union and the united states he started out on wall street at a brokerage firm at the age of thirty one he became president of the new york stock exchange he studied economics at columbia university i'm not trying to bring him back from the grave lindsey don't get me wrong but what i'm trying to say is that he was very well rounded he was extremely experienced and he was a political and i think of the two potential candidates i think that powell is it is much more qualified and that his back career gives him a lot more experience than that of kevin morse who really is purely kind of a finance guy that's that certainly not the case with powell well we know that you
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like that a ray of a background a deep resume to really bring i want to say wisdom to the fed what about stanley fischer is chair last day coming up october thirteenth again we've come more than a couple of openings here how would you fill his chair. well i think that there are many other qualified candidates some of whom happen to be on the short list i do like the idea of john taylor from stanford i certainly don't advocate for central banking being run by one individual rule even if it's got his name on it the tailor role but i do advocate for what his rule exemplifies and that is an added measure of discipline among policymakers at the fed i think that we could use somebody like him if there's going to be an insistence on having many more academics come into the fed there are several other bankers i think that are extremely qualified as well but again their names did not land on the short list right will short list
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resisted. though to future nominees we're talking about putting together plans for new these new positions do you think that yellen replacement takes priority in this situation some someone will also say maybe maybe he won't. saying no no he might say. right now it is no longer kind of a def con one numbers game anymore it was before the senate confirm quarrels but now that they have even after stanley fischer is departure on october the thirteenth there's still enough wiggle room because now you've still got four people on the committee until janet yellen leaves so right now the main focal point what markets are focused on more than anything right now is who is going to fill janet yellen seat and or will she accept the chance to keep the position so i think that every other vacancy on the federal reserve board at this point is kind of who
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cares until we hear that final nominee to go up in front of the senate right into the hinge of the door and when do you think this is going to happen let's talk timelines ride up a little last minute how long are they going to drag this out for us if you look back to when bernanke it was first appointed if you look back to when yellen was first appointed. the two predecessors really had the news in hand before halloween so think about it that way i would be astonished if this dragged on into november just because congress is going to go for recess there's the holidays coming up you're going to have to give the senate enough time to vet the potential candidate that brings us back to jerome powell simply because he's already been vetted by the senate he's already a sitting member of the federal reserve board and if you're going to drag your feet and that's why i think vegas betting odds have gone through the roof on powell over the last few hours and fallen on worse if if this hadn't. it is not going to get
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things done quickly and i think we've we've seen the propensity to not get things done quickly then powell certainly could have been easier nominee to get through the senate because he's a no no right trick or treat for us here in washington then and for those on wall street as well thank you so much for your input daniel de martino the president of money strong and author of fed up an insider's take on why the federal reserve is bad for america thank you india can blame its deep monetization in the mid year introduction of the country wide goods and services tax for a lower growth projection from the international monetary fund the i.m.f. says it stands at six point seven percent growth in two thousand and seventeen point five percent less than its previous two forecasts in april and in july at the center of this economic uncertainty and slower growth is the goods and services tax which promised to help break down india's complex duty system in an effort to unify the domestic market the government expects that to help propel growth over eight
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percent in the near future the latest report is released ahead of the annual meetings of the i.m.f. and the world bank it puts china slightly ahead of india in terms of growth rate for the next year in two thousand and seventeen. and it's looking even better elsewhere the international monetary fund has put canada at the top seven nations when it comes to economic growth in fact it's issued some positive news from many countries but the organization fears anti-globalization movement presents a hurdle for our teeth and hyla ventures in toronto with more on this alex let's start in canada where you are what's the latest me i.m.f. on canada's economic states and i know what you're thinking let's do this a little bit like the movie groundhog day because we've heard this before that cater to the top of the g seven that would be the o.e.c.d. from paris a just a little while back they measured a can of those at the top and now we have the i.m.f. the washington based saying pretty much the exact same thing the merrill behalf a basis point above what the originally predicted now be put growth at three
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percent for canada for two thousand and seventeen which is making a lot of people happy obviously in canada especially so these are nice numbers it's nice to see and for economy right now that has been doing really really well and with of course are we going to the south which is a machine when you look at america canada stands at a really good place when we think in terms of let's say the o.e.c.d. or the i.m.f. and the kudo's that they're giving us right ok i'll let you continue to brag here one of the factors that helping canada is growth and this and this stellar economic performance you know there's a couple of beater factors here and one of the factors is that the drag from the oil prices that originally that we saw is pretty much dissipating canada's not as reliant on oil as it once was and what i say once i'm a jump talking the very recent history just a year or two ago now candidates kind of backed off of that we understand the way oil prices are moving so that's been
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a positive move in that direction the drag is not what it used to once be second of all it's our central big they've done a phenomenal job with interest rate six and keeping this country afloat we saw how we can to weather two thousand and eight deal with the biggest economic crisis. while that you know you guys were bumped a little bit harder than we were we did really well there third of all i mean it's it's basically the fact that the government is pumping a lot of money into the economy so that could be a good thing or could be a really bad thing a lot of people are looking at as a bad thing especially fiscal conservatives they don't want to see this movement forward where it's actually the government money taxpayer money driving the economy so that is a big part of this factor of justin trudeau as government has been pushing forward with a lot of investment but that investment means debt somewhere down the road of course it does canada's not the only one on this less the how are the other countries performing. well we have a little graph here for your soul a list i should say of countries and how they're doing as well as the world so you
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know the i.m.f. and bumped up a few let's say entities that moving forward the world went up from three point five to three point six percent growth advanced markets jump from two to two point two percent emerging markets this is an interesting one state a four point six percent a lot of that is due to china which you mentioned already so it was bumped up from six point seven to six point eight percent so china is one of the fastest growing when it comes to expansion of the economy and as you mentioned also slightly ahead of india which is at six point seven but china is expected to slow down to india in the coming future in two thousand and eighteen might surpass trying to in of course we have the united states there on the list to two point one to two point two now with the united states the growth projections have a bit too too high because those things that talked about those major tax cuts they're not really coming from fruition and i.m.f. is thinking that just might not happen somewhere down the road at least in the near future the brits they would prefer to hit pretty hard for a couple of reasons their economy slowing down basically by point three percent
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they've been downgraded to one point seven percent. of a growth rate and this is due to low consumption levels in the country but also many people are saying. right breaks and that's where we get into this whole globalization thing countries that are ignoring the factors of bloated globalization like like the united states or like britain might actually if they're not playing the game they might actually be hurt in the long run and of course russia as well a little bump up in good growth for russia it seems that a lot of countries are doing well or better than projected initially but that antiglobalization think it might hurt a few in the future and try thank you very much that coming out us from toronto thank you. time now for a quick break but stick around because when we return we're heads yet another snag in the u.k. this time it's about paying the taxes on my gas former u.s. trading commissioner in part and tells us and on the tax situation up on capitol hill to go to break here the number of thousands out.
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i think the average viewer just after watching a couple of segments understands that we're telling stories there are critics can't tell when you know why because their advertisers won't let them. in order to create change you have to be honest you have to tell the truth parties able to do that every story is built on going after the back story to what's really happening out there to the american what's happening when a corporation makes a pharmaceutical chills people when a company in the environmental business ins up polluting a river that causes cancer and other illnesses they put all the health risk all the dangers out to the american public those are stories that we tell every week and you know what they're working.
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on all the worlds and all the news companies merely players but what kind of partners are into american play r.t. america offers more artsy american personal. many ways the news landscape is just like the real news fake news good actors bad actors and in the end you could never hear or. so the park and all the world's all the world's all the world's a stage and we are definitely a player. it were says it is slamming the brakes on any notions that it should contribute in u.k.'s national insurance system. the insurance pays for the national health systems pensions and other benefits which its drivers could collect on if they were
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directly employed currently the those working in the u.k. are classified as self employed there is no employment insurance to be had there are no sick days and the other benefits be fitting full employment in that country were says insurance contributions would cost tens of millions of pounds and it just won't do it we were is in several heated battles with london's transport regulator as it moves to cut your worst phone app license and to prevent the company operating in london due to safety regulation violations the new c.e.o. who were met with london transport officials to apologize for past mistakes no word though on whether any headway was actually made for the company is finally appeals in both these cases forty thousand drivers operate in london carrying three point five million customers. and pharmacy benefits manager express scripts will buy privately held medical benefits manager every core health care for three point six billion dollars every quarter manages medical benefits for around one hundred million people express scripts runs prescription drug plans and
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processes mail order prescriptions and baling for prescriptions filled at retail pharmacies that the acquisition bolsters express scripts medical benefit management services the purchase is expected to close in the fourth quarter after receiving regulatory approval it's a rapidly changing field of business out there this news comes on the heels of an announcement by amazon dot com that it is entering the world of prescription drug sales and delivery. and the trump administration has offered up a seven page blueprint for tax reform that they say will become law later this year what is it and can tax reform actually become a reality here to discuss this is former u.s. attorney commissioner bart chilton part thank you so much for being here for this now administration officials are clear in saying that tax reform will be done this here secretary recently has said we are one hundred percent committed to getting it done this year it is critical to our economy we have
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a unique opportunity to do this and that of course director of the national economic council gary condit said i do think it can pass. both of the tax committees in both chambers in two thousand and seventeen the administration says that there's a difference from the health care effort tax reform they've socialized their proposal among key members of the house the senate and they have buy in from what they call the big six are those the reasons are so confident that it will become law at the end of the year is there something else where are they getting this this magic from well it is a different approach mean you know health care just seemed very haphazard and you know on again off again so i've never heard these terms i mean i worked in the house and senate for fifteen years so i've never heard the term social lot as a whole. and i had never heard this phrase is lots of acronyms you get killed bodies with acronyms in washington but i've never heard the phrase the big six i mean it sounds like a good band like to drive
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a seven the big say i prefer the. bend but one of the big six is by the way and this is gary conan yeah we're talking about the big six but it includes them there are two of the big boys club old boy with clyde so those two it's the speaker of the house the senate majority leader and then the chairs of the tax writing committee that's kevin brady of the house ways and means committee and orrin hatch of utah the other there are now finance committee so those were the ones that had quite a. quote socializes proposal but at this point i mean i think it's really dicey to get it done by the end of the year i have to see but it would be i don't know what they're smoking and down there are putting in the i don't know maybe they're like the hotel and vegas right about popping in the myth they're pumping oxygen into that house and treasury and not only that we've got the holidays interrupting all of that let's take half a second back though and talk about the administration what its proposed the brass tax but other than ten tax reform will be really great trungpa said you want to
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simplify the code limit the number of brackets it's like seven to three or four if you're if you're really rich got problems there. and he also said he wants to reduce corporate tax rates make the us more competitive bring that money back and why did the administration propose in the blueprint well they've done pretty much what he laid out as a candidate and then earlier this year remember in may they released one page so that if they did propose it is not now nine now it's now it's seven o eight arctics so they and by the way previous administrations republicans or democrats when they put a proposal forward you know they pay attention to the details i mean the details are out or i'm not sure that the details matter to this administration which is fine that is when you get something passed and they really need it after health care tax writers are going to take care of that they're going to they're going to do they're going to be diligent about the details so you're right they've gone from seven down to three brackets the brackets will be twelve that's up for the lowest
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lowest earners up from ten percent twelve twenty five and thirty five in the thirty five for the those that earn the most in our nation is going down from thirty nine point six down to thirty five now you might say wait a minute they're reducing on the wealthiest and they're raising on the lower democrats will say but also not fair because they are doubling the proposal is to double the standard deduction so for individuals they double it from roughly six thousand to twelve thousand for a married couple. is roughly from twelve thousand to twenty four thousand that you're not taxed on any of that so it could be a big boon plus they want to get rid of these deductions miry deductions and loopholes all really save one point six or one point eight trillion dollars over ten years or so and then on the corporate side like you said you want to reduce those they're at thirty five now during the campaign this is only the this is the only divergent thing from what he called for and what they actually proposed they wanted to go from thirty five down to fifteen now he's going down twenty is where
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they are which is still on the low side ambitious it's an ambitious move but no one believed it was really going to go to fifteen throughout the campaign so i am large what he called for is what they put forward and so good for them right right key challenge paying for the tax cuts it's not neutral and reports revenues for opening up arctic national wildlife refuge to oil drilling not a lot of fans of that on both sides of the aisle can be used to pay for five trillion dollars in tax cuts explain what they need to do in the budget side of this reform debate because people say they want it budget neutral whatever and so the bottom line is you cannot spend money you can't cost the government money after ten years without going to reaching a sixty vote threshold so they and right now the proposal going to cost five point eight trillion dollars and they've only allowed it as congress in the budget they're working on right now had passed congress they've only allowed for tax reform to spend one point eight trillion so they've got four point three or so
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trillion dollars they need to come up with which is why they're looking at opening up an wara that's the arctic national wildlife refuge as you said to drilling that's federal lands that get money from federal drilling and a bunch of other what they call pay for is the bottom line is there are many people in washington because we've got a four hundred forty trillion dollars debt billion dollar deficit every year four hundred forty billion dollar deficit that don't want to spend one more nickel track tax reform they say has to be budget neutral so we'll see where they go from here well not only that but when you look at the modern. g.o.p. a lot of people will vote g.o.p. because they're fiscally conservative they don't want that they're not the drill baby drill as they don't want the arctic refuge drilled they want to know where this is going to come from other than something like that i think it's pretty sloppy rhetoric coming out of that that's just my opinion how about the politics of tax reform as for talking about there are majorities of the president's party in the house and senate that didn't win health care couldn't get it through what are the votes look like for passing totals or form fifty two republicans so the problem probably passed something in the house something but in the senate i got to get
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seventy two republicans and the president seems to be even though i'm sure that he can count very well he seems to be self-inflicted wounds on his policy proposals every single day it was bob court corker just recently who said can't spend another penny of the it's got to be budget neutral and you still got mccain senator flake susan collins. there's five that may vote against this thing again you can't afford to lose more than two so i think it has or it's a long rough road to hoe let's look at the markets though they've been they've been boid by the mere prospect of tax reform we see that when we get these one pay seven page and sometimes i think it's nine i guess it's just seven how does the markets reacting to all of this if it pushes forward i think they've been bullied as we've talked about many times just by the prospect of being president and then by all these great records but i almost think at this point lindsey that it's big and not sure how much more the markets can take off i personally have talked about this
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maybe six weeks ago i think there's a little bit of a speculative bubble there in equities and you know a little bit of a bubble is ok but i don't see that it's going to do a whole lot more for the economy if they did get it done this year maybe but again i'm a little concerned about that all right but let's one last question based on your experience working on the health for years i want you to be as optimistic as you possibly can for us what's the soonest you think tax reform could be completed that would be a trick or treat for all of us that would be you know candy in the stock and give us a good and a. the year it passes it passes the house ways and means committee sometime in the next couple weeks and then beginning of november it passes the house floor senate passes in committee beginning of november and then done at the end of november in the senate then they go to conference that both of them have to come together and then they do that and they both vote on it one december twenty third that's the optimistic view but by the same token if i'm saying that i'm really probably you know yeah smoking i want the stuff the thing is i think we need to do one of those
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super bowl bracket things where we start taking out insert the numbers and take bets on that spot. thank you so much for coming in on this for me yesterday commissioner part. october is the time of year in the united states when we get a little pumpkin crazy pumpkin flavored lattes jack-o. lanterns the list goes on and on for some here it's also the time to see you can grow the largest gourd this week half moon bay california was the place to be as people across the u.s. brought in some of the largest pumpkins you will ever see they competed against one another for weight these pumpkins were so large cranes and forklifts were needed just to weigh them it's not just bragging rights though that get the growers to tell their fields the winner walks away with sixteen thousand dollars this year man
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from washington state one with a pumpkin weighing in at over one ton he got the money the bragging rights and even broke a world record. thanks for watching everybody be sure to catch us on direct t.v. in the united states you can find us on the our team channel three two one and if you miss us on direct t.v. catch me on youtube youtube dot com slash r t thanks for watching see you next time . mark twain said it's easier to go fooling people than to convince them they're fools that could be why america is so divided because people have been fed fake news paid for by corporate interests they beat you down until you believe their
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fairy tales well here's a story for you it's called big and it's full of facts which. i do not know if the russian state hacked into john podesta emails and gave them to wiki leaks but i do know barack obama's director of national intelligence has not provided credible to support his claims. i also know he perjured himself in a senate hearing three months before the revelations provided by edward snowden he denied to be n.s.a. was carrying out wholesale surveillance of the us. the hyperventilating corporate media has once again proved to be an echo for government claims that cannot be verified you would have thought they would have learned something after serving as george w. bush's useful idiots in the lead up to the invasion of iraq. it is vitally important
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that the press remains rooted in a fact based universe especially when we enter an era when truth and fiction are becoming. interesting. the senate foreign relations committee chairman a republican says president trump's actions could start world war three is he right we're taking a look at this on this edition of the public. welcome to politicking on larry king there's been an escalating war of words and tweets between president down trump and republican senator bob corker of tennessee who was once seen as a trump ally on sunday senator corker said in an interview that the president was treating the oval office like a reality show and claimed that mr trump's reckless threats.
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