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Latest | Highest ratedWhy Government Deficits Don't Affect Interest Rates [View article]
Rogers: In This Market, Commodities Rule [View article]
Big Banks: The Consensus Is Cracking [View article]
Ultimately, Who Benefits from Too-Big-To-Fail [View article]
Where Is Main Street's Recovery? [View article]
Federal Reserve Exit Watch: Part 3 [View article]
Inflation and the Hierarchy of Needs [View article]
2) Bubbles be definition are an over allocation of resources to one or more asset groups leading to an unsustainable increase in prices. As the author suggests, the Fed simply provides the liquidity and controls the intensity of the flow sluicing into the asset categories. It is, however, most convenient we have a bubble today that confers a fairly broad based wealth effect. A suspicious person could be forgiven for thinking it was engineered.
3) If banks cannot be profitable while simultaneously being prepared for a fat tail event, the business model is inherently flawed and they should either rework the model or be allowed to fail upon the event.
Can the New Pecora Commission Get Its Job Done? [View article]
Given the widespread opportunities for embarrassment and potential accusations of fraud, I'm inclined to think those in power are anxious to move on as quickly as possible and declare a recovery rather than drilling into the facts and really understanding the underlying causes of the great recession.
The gravest economic crisis since the Great Depression has been covered in the media largely from the top down, told primarily from the perspective of the Obama Administration and large banks, and expressed in the voices and ideas of people in elite institutions more than those of everyday Americans. It's almost as if MSM coverage has been guided by the white house press office.
Those at Washington's blog believe there is a coverup and quote
William K. Black - professor of economics and law, and the senior regulator during the S & L crisis - who "says that that the government's entire strategy now - as during the S&L crisis - is to cover up how bad things are ("the entire strategy is to keep people from getting the facts").
Black also says:
There has been no honest examination of the crisis because it would embarrass C.E.O.s and politicians . . .
Instead, the Treasury and the Fed are urging us not to examine the crisis and to believe that all will soon be well."
New Era of Wall Street Wealth, In Part Courtesy of Washington D.C [View article]
(1) Throwing trillions of dollars at the "too big to fails", instead of admitting that many of them are insolvent
(2) Undermining trust of nations all over the world in the American economy
(3) Failing to restore Glass-Steagall, reign in credit default swaps, or do anything else necessary to stabilize the financial system
(4) Attempting to restart high levels of leverage and securitization
(5) Failing to take real measures to decrease employment and increase manufacturing
(6) Creating an enormous debt overhang and trashing our currency
America's Multiple Choice Economy [View article]
It's the unseen structural issues lurking below the radar that concern me; it's the things we can not see that trouble me because when we see them they will appear as surprises, catching us unprepared. For example, more and more US companies are undertaking R&D overseas and I just recently read that many highly educated Chinese and Indians plan to return home rather than pursue careers and/or business interests here in the states. The cost of both could be enormous but the latter could be a sea change and a game changer in terms of innovation and sources of future jobs:
"But a growing body of evidence indicates that skilled foreign immigrants create jobs for Americans and boost our national competitiveness. More than 52% of Silicon Valley’s startups during the recent tech boom were started by foreign-born entrepreneurs. Foreign-national researchers have contributed to more than 25% of our global patents, developed some of our break-through technologies, and they helped make Silicon Valley the world’s leading tech center. Foreign-born workers comprise almost a quarter of all the U.S. science and engineering workforce and 47% of science and engineering workers who have PhDs. It is very possible that some of the smart Indians who sat in the room with me holding their hand up on Columbus Day will start the next Google or Apple. Many of them will build companies which employ thousands. But the jobs will be in Hyderbad or Pune, not Silicon Valley."
Record Deficit May Dash Obama's Big Plans [View article]
How Washington's Policymakers Are Damaging the U.S. Economy [View article]
In addition to policies that amplify instability which increases the implicit discount rate, thereby stimulating immediate consumption, low interest rate policies discourage savings and encourage consumption. And through the identity that savings must equal investment, investments are reduced when savings are reduced. Taken to together all of these policies encourage consumption and discourage investment and savings; this is exactly the opposite of how long term wealth is created.
I don't think this is terribly well understood but comports with congress and election cycle economics. For them, wealth is winning the next election.
Why We'll Be Seeing Stimulus 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, Etc. (Until the Great Implosion) [View article]
It's no accident that as (1) government shirks fiscal responsibility and expands its footprint upon the economy (2) perception grows that the US government views the constitution and contract law as an inconvenience and (3) politics becomes increasingly partisan and divisive, the de facto reserve currency of the world....the fiat dollar.... is depreciating. It's all tied to gether.
As I have noted earlier, we are rapidly approaching the point where national debt equals GDP; many prominent economists view this as the practical limit for governement borrowing primarily because of rising debt servicing costs.
We will soon hit a wall and be forced to contain further increases in spending. Global capital markets will step in and impose the financial discipline that should have been imposed by our craven congress.
A Weak Dollar Benefits Chinese Exports [View article]
The Underlying Size of U.S. Economy [View article]
Robert Barro of Harvard, however, argues that long-term peactime multipliers are closer to zero and during war they may be around .6. The reason they are not 1 is that increases in government spending are accompanied by frictional losses and crowding out of private investment.
A more recent sudy determined that in the US the short-term impact of fiscal spending was .6 and the longer-term impact was 1.2. The differences have to do with debt levels, exchange rate mechanism, degree of economic openess and type of government spending and other structural factors; since the 1980's spending multipliers have been contracting.
The irony is that we will fund these brilliantly designed spending programs with taxes increases; taxes have a mutiplier of 2 or 3, meaning if you increase taxes 1% it will be accompanied by economic contraction two or three times the size of the tax increase. Reducing taxes would have the opposite effect.
Not surprisingly we have the worst mix of fiscal policies because we are more interested in transfering wealth than creating wealth.