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Rajan ---Fed is screwing up..

Started by Riversider
about 15 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009
Discussion about
Rajan: There are still hidden fractures that threaten the global economy. The United States papers over it with an extreme degree of stimulus which creates conditions for excessive consumption and investment. We are pressing too hard on the accelerator here. Just look at the interest rates: They remain at a very low level, which is quite unusual. We are witnessing a recovery, but it is a false,... [more]
Response by stevejhx
about 15 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

You really don't stop, do you?

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Response by Riversider
about 15 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009

http://valueinvestingworld.blogspot.com/2010/10/raghuram-rajan-on-cnbc.html

Rajan basically says the Princeton Economists running things
are morons.

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Response by w67thstreet
about 15 years ago
Posts: 9003
Member since: Dec 2008

Ok my turn. I got a nasty speeding tkt once.

Ok, your turn riversider, tell me all that you have been wrong about in life.

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Response by pubes67thstreet
about 15 years ago
Posts: 9
Member since: Oct 2010

nasty speeding ticket and nasty rash. Interesting.
http://streeteasy.com/nyc/talk/discussion/32152-I-got-a-bad-rash-down-there

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Response by Riversider
about 15 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009

Consider these two data points: First, an American retiree named Dianna who has seen her retirement savings rendered worthless by the ill-considered policy actions of the Federal Open Market Committee. Second, the action of the gold market, which is likewise suggesting that fiat paper dollars have no value. If you take the two observations together, it suggests to us that the Fed's actions are feeding global deflation and that the next leg down in the U.S. financial markets could be particularly severe -- especially if the Fed resumes printing more funny money.

While some analysts are calling for a mild devaluation of the dollar, what we see forming ahead could be something far more dramatic and potentially disruptive to the world economy, namely a protracted period of deflation driven by the subserviant position of the Fed vis-a-vis the largest banks. This new shrinkage will not only see gold moving higher but will also see the dollar collapse a la the FDR dollar devaluation of the early 1930s. This crisis is being caused by Fed zero interest rate and quantitative easing ("QE") policies.

As we have said before and we'll say again, the FOMC's zero rate policies imply that the dollar and all assets denominated in dollars have no value. Stocks, bonds and other financial assets depend upon income to make these obligations money good. Without a positive return, there is no reason to hold dollar assets. When President Abraham Lincoln introduced fiat paper dollars backed by nothing to finance the Civil War, these pieces of debt originally were convertible into Treasury notes that paid interest. But the need of a growing nation for a means of exchange rendered such devices irrelevant.

Today the situation is reversed. Non-commercial demand for dollars is collapsing in much of the global economy, in part because the Fed is transferring something like three quarters of a trillion dollars annually from individual and corporate savers to the Wall Street banks. And even this vast subsidy will be insufficient to prevent the ultimate restructuring of the top three U.S. banks. What will Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and the other members of the FOMC say to Dianna and the millions of other Americans impoverished by their policy errors when we have to break up the top-three U.S. banks anyway?

http://us1.institutionalriskanalytics.com/pub/iramain.asp

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Response by Riversider
about 15 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009

People don’t usually spend their money buying things they don’t want or need, so for private transactions, this kind of inefficient spending is not much of a problem. But the same cannot always be said of the government. If the stimulus package takes the form of bridges to nowhere, a result could be economic expansion as measured by standard statistics but little increase in economic well-being.
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In the magazine article, Mr. Obama reflects on his presidency, admitting that he let himself look too much like “the same old tax-and-spend Democrat,” realized too late that “there’s no such thing as shovel-ready projects.”

http://gregmankiw.blogspot.com/

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