Krugman
Expect These Eight Steps From The Government’s Playbook
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/26/2013 14:55 -0500
To anyone paying attention, reality is now painfully obvious. These bankrupt, insolvent governments have just about run out of fingers to plug the dikes. And history shows that, once this happens, governments fall back on a very limited playbook...
Guest Post: Hayek vs Krugman – Cyprus’ Capital Controls
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/25/2013 21:41 -0500
Nobelist Paul Krugman has a propensity to spin and conceal. This allows for deception – the type of thing that hoodwinks some readers of his New York Times column. While deception doesn’t qualify as lying, it also fails to qualify as truth-telling. Prof. Krugman’s New York Times column, “Hot Money Blues” (25 March 2013) is a case in point. Prof. Krugman sprinkles holy water on the capital controls that will be imposed in Cyprus. He further praises to the sky the post-1980 capital controls that were introduced in a number of other countries.
Krugman's "Smoot-Hawley Moment"
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 03/25/2013 12:04 -0500This is what the world's "smartest" economist is calling for.
Euro Gold +2.5% In Week – Deposit Withdrawal Restrictions And Capital Controls Cometh
Submitted by GoldCore on 03/22/2013 10:09 -0500Rather than sitting nervously and passively and awaiting the coming financial dislocations and expropriations, investors and savers need to be prepared for the uncertain financial scenarios that seem increasingly likely.
Hoping for the best, but preparing for less benign scenarios remains prudent.
10 Examples Of The Clueless Denial About The 'Real' Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/14/2013 13:45 -0500
They didn't see it coming last time either. Back in 2007, President Bush, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and just about every prominent voice in the financial world were all predicting that we would experience tremendous economic prosperity well into the future. In fact, as late as January 2008 Bernanke boldly declared that "the Federal Reserve is not currently forecasting a recession." At the time, only the "doom and gloomers" were warning that everything was about to fall apart. And of course we all know what happened. But just a few short years later, history seems to be repeating itself. All of our "leaders" swear that everything is going to be okay. You can believe them if you want, but denial is not just a river in Egypt, and another crash is inevitably coming.
Guest Post: A Community-Based Alternative To The Welfare State
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/14/2013 11:22 -0500
Two of the key characteristics of an empire in terminal decline are complacency and intellectual sclerosis, what we have termed a failure of imagination. (The others are military over-reach, chronic deficits, a parasitic Elite that is immune to what's left of the rule of law, weak leadership, mass dependence on the Central State and excessive consumption.) It is important to discuss alternatives before the Status Quo devolves and collapses, so we have an intellectual framework to guide healthier, more sustainable alternatives once the current system implodes.
Question for Liz Warren: How Many Subsidies Does a Zombie Bank Need?
Submitted by rcwhalen on 03/12/2013 08:03 -0500Yo Liz: Subsidies for the zombie banks total more than $3 annually for every dollar in income reported by the industry...
Sense And Nonsense
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/11/2013 11:58 -0500“‘Devaluing a currency,’ one senior Federal Reserve official once told me, ‘is like peeing in bed. It feels good at first, but pretty soon it becomes a real mess.’”
—Francesco Guerrera, The Wall Street Journal, 4 Feb 2013.
On Senator Ron Johnson Vs Krugman
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 03/11/2013 11:24 -0500The beast is howling - and Krugman thinks it's his cat purring.
Not Keynes Or Kuznets Or Krugman But Cowperthwaite
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2013 04:17 -0500
It is not Keynes or Kuznets to whom should be looking, much less the ineffable Krugman, but the shining example of Sir John Cowperthwaite whose enlightened strategy of what he called ‘positive non-interventionism’ in 1960s Hong Kong— coupled with a near blanket ban on the collation of official statistics for fear their provision would tempt men into meddling (“If I let them compute those statistics, they’ll want to use them for planning.’’)—allowed the entrepôt to more than quadruple its GDP per capita (it really is a hard habit to break, isn’t it?) in comparison with its colonial masters in Britain, in the space of single generation. A man who eschewed tariffs in an era of protection; who abstained from government borrowing at a time when his peers were fast becoming ’all Keynesians now’; who capped income taxes at a modest 15% in an age when the rich were being ‘squeezed until their pips squeaked’; and who refused all acts of corporate welfare, Cowperthwaite’s assessment of his own role was characteristically modest, once declaring that, as regards his contribution to Hong Kong’s success, "I did very little. All I did was to try to prevent some of the things that might undo it."
Experts on the Deficit
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 03/07/2013 13:40 -0500What bothers me is that those who are now pushing the story that deficits aren't a problem, are the same ones who will be crying, "We never could have seen that happening", when the SHTF again.
Niall Ferguson Goes Searching For Paul Krugman's Embarrassing "Childhood Trauma"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/06/2013 13:24 -0500
Updated for Krugman's sociopathological response
Niall Ferguson "In my view Paul Krugman has done fundamental damage to the quality of public discourse on economics. He can be forgiven for being wrong, as he frequently is--though he never admits it. He can be forgiven for relentlessly and monotonously politicizing every issue. What is unforgivable is the total absence of civility that characterizes his writing. His inability to debate a question without insulting his opponent suggests some kind of deep insecurity perhaps the result of a childhood trauma. It is a pity that a once talented scholar should demean himself in this way."
Guest Post: Of Krugman And Minsky
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2013 14:16 -0500
Paul Krugman just did something mind-bending. In a recent column, he cited Minsky ostensibly to defend Alan Greenspan’s loose monetary policies. Krugman correctly identifies the mechanism here — prior to 2008, people forgot about risk. Macroeconomic stability bred complacency. And the longer the perceived good times last, the more fragile the economy becomes, as more and more risky behaviour becomes the norm. Stability is destabilising. The Great Moderation was intimately connected to markets becoming forgetful of risk. And bubbles formed. In endorsing Minsky’s view, Krugman is coming closer to the truth. But he is still one crucial step away. If stability is destabilising, we must embrace the business cycle. Smaller cyclical booms, and smaller cyclical busts. Not boom, boom, boom and then a grand mal seizure.
Everyone Loves Abe?
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 03/03/2013 10:52 -0500The love affair with Abe is a short.
Guest Post: 50 Signs That The U.S. Health Care System Is About To Collapse
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/27/2013 13:46 -0500
The U.S. health care system is a giant money making scam that is designed to drain as much money as possible out of all of us before we die. In the United States today, the health care industry is completely dominated by government bureaucrats, health insurance companies and pharmaceutical corporations. At this point, our health care system is a complete and total disaster. Health care costs continue to go up rapidly, the level of care that we are receiving continues to go down, and every move that our politicians make just seems to make all of our health care problems even worse. At the same time, hospital administrators, pharmaceutical corporations and health insurance company executives are absolutely swimming in huge mountains of cash. Unfortunately, this gigantic money making scam has become so large that it threatens to collapse both the U.S. health care system and the entire U.S. economy.





