No one said $830 billion "didn't work". No one said $60 billion would get it "done".
It came up short, it was not an "abject failure". Most economists have rated it a partial success, to varying degrees. And the present economy is not "horrific". The Great Depression was much closer to that, here, and overseas and history provides much better examples of "horrific" economies.It didn't work if you judge it by the employment numbers promised. In fact, if you use that criteria (which the administration touted for support of the plan) it was an abject failure.
If you judge the fiscal stimulus on top of the $4 Trillion the Fed printed and all we got was this horrific economy, then "failure" paints too bright a picture.
Precisely. Like trying to simplify the difference between household and government finance to "1 + 0 = 1".Hocus pocus: meaningless talk or activity, often designed to draw attention away from and disguise what is actually happening.
It came up short, it was not an "abject failure". Most economists have rated it a partial success, to varying degrees. And the present economy is not "horrific". The Great Depression was much closer to that, here, and overseas and history provides much better examples of "horrific" economies.