Here is blog post that answers that question. It showed that you really have to define the question a little better to answer it Some of the factors he took into account were; dividends, inflation, the starting year, and if you adjust the cycles for when their policies take effect. Depending on what you pick for those factors, either party would show and an advantage. The result is that it really doesn't matter which party is in office for your decision to invest in the stock market.
|
2 | deleted 1 characters in body | ||
|
|
||||
|
1 |
|
||
|
Here is blog post that answers that question. It showed that you really have to define the question a little better to answer it Some of the factors he took into account were; dividends, inflation, the starting year, and if you adjust the cycles for when their policies take effect. Depending on what you pick for those factors, either party would show and advantage. The result is that it really doesn't matter which party is in office for your decision to invest in the stock market. |
||||