Poll a majority of americans are feeling good about 2014 but what economic threats are on the horizon for the new year . Lets bring in todays panel. Pete hegseth concerned veterans of america and fox news contributor, jack hough from barons and simon constable from the wall street journal. Pete start with you, was this a good year for your family . 67 said yes and highest number going back since 2009. It is good to hear. But surprising as supposed recovery has not hit middle america. Interest rates have to go up at some point. The economy is addicted to them. Debt ceiling fight in march. Where will that go with emboldened conference. Adam i tell you where it will go . Jack we have the debt ceiling problem in march. Oil will go up eventually in price. Could it happen before march . Oil could go back up. I dont think it will go anywhere near where its with. This many looking fed rate hike will be less of a exciting event than investors think. Adam could be a minimal hike even if they do
Businesses. Trouble. They will have to prove that they are applied to the group. How much time and effort will that take . This will take a lot of time. 90 of people will ultimately qualify. For many, it will be back and forth with a lot of paperwork. The fines are not small. 2 of your adjusted gross income. More penalties for each of your uninsured children. Adam what happened if i decide not to pay . Arent those penalties dependent on whether or not i get a refund . That is right. You would be building up a debt with the irs. What if i never get a refund. You are outsmarting them. The employers are also facing big problems. They will have to provide this obamacare compliant insurance. Or pay a fine that is 2000 per uninsured employee. Retailers that have large workforces are going to really feel this. It will add about 1 per hour. The businesses, if they decide not to pay for their employees, they will be more directly, it will be much harder for businesses to avoid paying. Absolutel
The North Carolina Supreme Court has upheld the funding model Greenville used for its now-discontinued red-light camera enforcement program. The 5-1 decision Thursday reversed an earlier ruling from the state Appeals Court.
The North Carolina Supreme Court will decide in the months ahead whether a cost-sharing agreement that funded Greenville’s red light camera enforcement program complied with the state constitution. Justices heard an hour of oral arguments on the topic Wednesday.
The North Carolina Supreme Court will decide in the months ahead whether a cost-sharing agreement that funded Greenville’s red light camera enforcement program complied with the state constitution. Justices heard