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The past
two articles on Keynesian Economics and the World Bank might
be tough for some teens (and some adults, like myself) to
understand. Sometimes it's easier to use current examples
to comprehend how a principle or an institution works. The
exercise below can be accomplished with your older children
and a search engine, and it might help reinforce what we've
learned within the past couple weeks.
First,
we need to remember the philosophy behind Keynesian Economics.
Four demands depend on each other to operate smoothly. These
demands are consumer, government, investment, and export.
The government is expected to stimulate economic growth when
the other demands falter.
We're
going to use a search engine to find news, because it's faster,
more convenient, and the news is posted frequently. We use
either the Yahoo
or Google
search engine, because both carry news articles for any given
topic at the top of each search page. The topic itself may
not carry its own news items; so if you fail to find news
the first time, try various keyword searches. If we type "world
bank" into one of these two search engines, we'll see current
news about or from the World Bank listed at the top of the
page, including the date and time the news story was submitted.
These
articles for BUYandHOLD are written in advance, so our news
will be a bit older than what you view today. We found the
following current news items about the World Bank:
- World
Bank Urges Mideast Peace - The Age (Australia)
- World
Bank Begins N38.3m Electrification Project in Abia - All
Africa.com
- Unhappy
with World Bank, some try to choke off its funding - Originally
from The Guardian (U.K.), reprinted in TaiPei
Times (Taiwan)
We continued
to search for tax news, so we typed "bush taxes" in the search
engine and came up with the following current headlines:
- Bush
Lauds Congress for Cutting Taxes - Reuters
- News
analysis: Bush cuts taxes but backs away from reform - International
Herald Tribune
- Bush
tax plan hardly qualifies as fair, relief - Alameda Times-Star
Online
Now we'll
analyze these stories to better understand them. We used the
"who, what, when, where, how, why" method to understand each
article. These are the same questions journalists ask themselves
when they write articles, and we know we'll find answers in
the news items because of this practice. If you find adjectives
or adverbs in the article, or a particular slant to the information,
you'll know you're reading an editorial, not a news article.
The editorial is an opinion piece. For this project we're
searching for news - just the facts.
We already
know "when" the story was written, so that question is easily
answered. The next questions we ask about these articles are
"where" the articles were printed, and "who" wrote the news.
The first topic, the World Bank, gave us headlines from local
papers all over the world. The second topic about President
Bush and the new tax cuts were printed in international news
mediums and local U.S. papers. This tells us both topics were
printed in areas where the news impacted reader lifestyles.
Next we
ask "what" the news is about. Although we were searching for
just two topics, the three returns for each topic showed three
different "slants" on the news. This was more obvious with
the World Bank than it was with the tax cuts. The World Bank
topic gave us various news stories about this institution's
activities throughout the world. The tax topic varied on different
ways to look at one news item. Each headline is designed to
tell us what's in the article. We know the headline, "Bush
Lauds Congress for Cutting Taxes" will tell us something different
than "Bush's tax cut plan: results may vary."
"How"
the story made news is important. If we look closer at the
news article about Bush lauding Congress for tax cuts, we
find this story made the news because the tax cut was specifically
structured to stimulate economic growth. This is news, because
the U.S. economy is still sluggish, and the tax cut is supposed
to help remedy this situation. "Why" this news about tax cuts
is simple if we apply what we learned from Keynesian Economics.
Let's take one quote from this Reuter's news story, and break
it down even further, so it's easier to understand:
"The
bill lowers the top tax rate on dividends and capital gains
to 15 percent through 2008 and accelerates scheduled income
tax cuts. It also includes tax breaks for businesses to encourage
investment in new equipment and provides for checks of up
to $400 per child to be issued in 2003."
The first
sentence breakdown tells us the government bill (who) will
lower top tax rates on dividends and capital gains and accelerate
income tax cuts (what) through 2008 (when). This will happen
to American companies (where) when they file their taxes (how).
"Why" this news is important is because government demand
is encouraging investment demand. The
growth of investment demand will supposedly stimulate consumer
demand.
We can
take the next two sentences and analyze them the same way.
The biggest news for the consumer in this paragraph is the
$400 child support in 2003. This gift is also designed to
encourage consumer spending. Whether we buy socks and shoes
or stocks that pay dividends is up to us, as long as we spend.
Since
we now understand Keynesian Economics, we know the government
will go into debt when they grant these tax cuts. A few sentences
later in this story we find this quote: "Straight after approving
the cuts, the Senate voted to raise the U.S. debt limit by
a record $984 billion." We can pat ourselves on the back for
understanding our country's financial workings.
Next week
we'll look at the IMF and their objectives, so we can learn
more about how the whole world operates within this structure.
Until
then,
Linda Goin
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