Archive - Jul 30, 2011 - Blog entry
Adam Smith Would Neither Recognize Nor Approve Of Our Financial, Monetary, Economic Or Legal Systems
Submitted by George Washington on 07/30/2011 23:33 -0500Got gold?
To DeFauLT, or NoT To DeFauLT
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 07/30/2011 22:26 -0500Whether 'tis nobler at this time to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous financial misfortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of rising debts
Policy for a Balance Sheet Recession
Submitted by Luc Vallee on 07/30/2011 18:53 -0500Economists will long debate the efficacy of our traditional policy response but, whatever the results so far, there are constraints that place severe limitations on the effectiveness of such policy going forward. The US deficit and the trajectory of US spending is unsustainably high and, as the late economist Herbert Stein famously observed, “what cannot last, will not do so”. Any further fiscal stimulus risks pushing US finances past the tipping point, which would be a reckless gamble. At near zero short term interest rates, traditional monetary policy has become impotent, QE has been ineffective and the Fed has entered uncharted waters with its massive increase in the monetary base, risking inflation once private sector deleveraging ceases and velocity picks up. So neither traditional remedy is available any longer.
With US unemployment lodged stubbornly above 9%, what is to be done? Our policymakers, economists and commentators appear trapped in the confines of a paradigm that is no longer viable. Is there any other policy that might help spur recovery, or must we become resigned to waiting it out?
On More QE and the Recession that won’t end
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 07/30/2011 16:51 -0500The recession still has not ended, but Bernanke's hands are tied by inflation.
A U.S. Sovereign Credit Downgrade Is No Laughing Matter
Submitted by EconMatters on 07/30/2011 15:43 -0500Sen. John kerry comments that the Chinese "are laughing all the way to the bank" on a downgrading of US Treasury securities. China owns about 8% of the U.S. debt, so does that mean the rest of 92% debtors, including the U.S. taxpayer, would also be "laughing"?
What Happens When A Paper Currency Fails?
Submitted by thetrader on 07/30/2011 03:05 -0500Hyperinflation.....








