In the example my professor gave he picked a Piper Pilatus PC-12 and this is what he wrote:
1. Aircraft expenses are based on information from www.planequest.com: variable cost will be $287 per hour and the total fixed cost will be $35,000 annually with an average usage of 200 hours a year, fixed cost becomes $175 per hour for a total cost of $462 per hour.
I already gave you some but you refused to review it. Too bad. But we have Japan, Weimar Republic, Zimbabwe, and our own Great Depression that tells us the Keynesian approach doesn't work. Never has, never will. Especially when some of the money is appropriated towards nonsense such as regulation of hunting registration licenses in Utah.
It's difficult to say, while the second great war did help the economy move out of depression faster. You can't really say that Roosevelt's social programs didn't play part, the CCC, TVA, and others were ongoing into the 1960's.
It's difficult to say, while the second great war did help the economy move out of depression faster. You can't really say that Roosevelt's social programs didn't play part, the CCC, TVA, and others were ongoing into the 1960's.
I already gave you some but you refused to review it. Too bad. But we have Japan, Weimar Republic, Zimbabwe, and our own Great Depression that tells us the Keynesian approach doesn't work. Never has, never will. Especially when some of the money is appropriated towards nonsense such as regulation of hunting registration licenses in Utah.
Still the Great Depression isn't an example you can use because of WWII. No one can say what would have happened.
Perhaps we should start producing again? Small businesses should be the backbone of the economy. Pumping more cash into those areas would not be a bad idea.
I'm not excited about the money given to the banks or the auto industry, but I can understand why he did it.