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Archive for the ‘Financial crisis’ Category

The financial system established in England after 1688, based on usurious lending to the state by private bankers, is reaching its final blowout in the form of a series of devastating bubbles and a massive bailout of the financiers with public money. But the issuance of money doesn’t have to be in the hands of a private consortium: another credit system is possible.

It might be politically toxic – but we must join the euro now

Posted by smeddum on November 16, 2008

It might be politically toxic – but we must join the euro now

Will Hutton

guardian.co.uk, Sunday November 16 2008 00.01 GMT

The Observer, Sunday November 16 2008

Hutton finally sees the light.

When the euro launched nearly 10 years ago, an unnamed euro-sceptic currency trader – now almost certainly redundant – famously called it a toilet currency. Last week it climbed to an all-time high against the pound. Read the rest of this entry »

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Merkel’s Financial Summit Wish List

Posted by seumasach on November 14, 2008

 

This measures seem modest enough but there is enough here to show that the Germans aren’t singing off the British hymn sheet under the direction of Brown. Thus:

“The document is intended as a challenge to the hedge fund industry, which has thus far been largely free from oversight, but also on tax and regulation havens like the Cayman Islands or the Channel Islands. Increased oversight of such offshore havens is paramount, the paper argues”.

In addition:

“The expert group opposes transforming the International Monetary Fund into the policeman of the global financial markets, as was suggested by French President Nicolas Sarkozy. The IMF lacks the expertise to function as a standard-setter for the financial market, according to the paper.

 

Spiegel

13th November, 2008

When she heads off to the world financial summit in Washington D.C. on Friday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel can take comfort in the fact that she has plenty of firepower. In her briefcase, she will have with her proposals and aims prepared for her by a group of six experts, headed up by Otmar Issing, the former chief economist at the European Central Bank (ECB). The group churned out the documents in just two weeks.

 

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China’s New Deal

Posted by seumasach on November 13, 2008

By Peter Navarro 

Asia Times

13th November, 2008

Years from now, China’s embrace of a massive fiscal stimulus, announced this week, will be seen as a far more important marker of the country’s emergence as an economic superpower than even the successful hosting of the 2008 Summer Olympic Games.

 

This two-year, US$600 billion fiscal stimulus – equal to a stunning one-sixth of China’s entire gross domestic product – focuses primarily on the construction of economically critical infrastructure, such as rail and energy networks and politically critical infrastructure, like low-income housing and healthcare. The historic importance of China’s “New Deal” is evident in at least five factors. 

First, China’s swift action aptly illustrates how this putatively communist country can flexibly embrace the kind of mainstream

Keynesian economics that has kept the capitalist world (mostly) in prosperity since the end of the Great Depression. It’s pitch-perfect fiscal policy. 

Second, in a supreme irony, China has acted far more quickly and decisively than the United States, with the students now teaching their former mentors. Indeed, Chinese officials, many of them schooled in US universities, seemed to have grasped far more quickly than US officials like Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke the futility of relying solely on interest rate cuts for rapid recovery. 

In particular, businesses won’t invest, no matter how low interest rates go, if the recession remains. Nor will lower interest rates entice consumers to buy big-ticket items such as cars and houses if they are worried about their jobs and shrinking stock portfolios. Chinese officials have grasped this point, even as European officials have thus far rejected fiscal stimulus and US officials continue to quibble over the size and timing of any package. 

Third, China’s fiscal stimulus package puts a powerful exclamation point on the tightly woven interconnectedness of the world’s major economies. While China continues to run large trade surpluses with the US and Europe, it is equally true that exports to China by American, European and even Asian countries constitute an ever-increasing component of economic growth

In this global trade, countries like Germany, Japan and the US provide sophisticated capital equipment for China’s “factory floor”. As China expands its infrastructure, companies like Hitachi and Caterpillar likewise benefit from increased sales to China. 

Fourth, the focus of China’s fiscal stimulus particularly on infrastructure illustrates a sophisticated understanding – seemingly lacking in the United States – of what is necessary to build a strong economy. In its next stage of development, China’s rail system must far better serve the inland areas of China where large pockets of rural poverty and high unemployment persist, despite three decades of robust growth. In fact, while the coastal areas from the Pearl River Delta up to Dalian have prospered, much of inland China remains impoverished. Swiftly developing better roads and rail and a more reliable and extensive electricity grid and water system is just what the country needs. 

Fifth, China’s New Deal will act as a powerful stimulus for domestic demand. Today, the Chinese economy is far too heavily dependent on export-driven growth. By stimulating domestic demand, China will not only better insulate itself from the vagaries of global trade. Rising domestic demand should also help reduce trade frictions that have arisen because of the large trade surpluses China runs with Europe and the US. 

Finally, China’s fiscal stimulus may also prove to be the beginning of the end of China’s willingness to finance the budget and trade deficits of the United States. 

For almost a decade, China has recycled many of the dollars it has earned through its export trade back into the US bond market. This has kept interest rates low in America and allowed the American consumer to spend far beyond his or her means. 

Now, however, China is going to need its foreign reserves and export earnings for domestic purposes. That should certainly mean fewer dollars available for recycling back to the US. In this way, China’s fiscal stimulus may act as a significant constraint on America’s own ability to successfully implement its own fiscal stimulus – even as China uses Keynesian policies to eclipse the US as the world’s reigning economic superpower. 

Peter Navarro is a professor at The Paul Merage School of Business at the University of California-Irvine, a CNBC contributor and author of The Coming China Wars. http://www.peternavarro.com. 

(Copyright 2008 Peter Navarro.)

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US to lose AAA rating on debt

Posted by seumasach on November 12, 2008

 

CNBC

10th November, 2008

click on above link to see video

The United States may be on course to lose its ‘AAA’ rating due to the large amount of debt it has accumulated, according to Martin Hennecke, senior manager of private clients at Tyche.

 

“The U.S. might really have to look at a default on the bankruptcy reorganization of the present financial system” and the bankruptcy of the government is not out of the realm of possibility, Hennecke said.

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Secret Plan For IMF World Dictatorship G-20 Summit In DC On 11-15-8

Posted by seumasach on November 11, 2008

Webster Tarpley

11th November, 2008

Rense.com

This is a confidential strategy paper for the November 15 G-20 summit in Washington DC. This is not a new Bretton Woods in any sense, but rather a British-steered attempt to impose the dictatorship of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on the entire planet, wiping out all hope of economic recovery, the modernization of the developing countries, and national sovereignty at the same time.
Read the rest of this entry »

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General Motors: end of the road ?

Posted by smeddum on November 11, 2008

General Motors: end of the road?
Is it all over for America’s biggest car maker? As Barack Obama’s new administration looks into the deep hole of US car makers’ finances, Andrew English examines the available options

Andrew English

11 Nov 2008 Telegraph

“It’s a disgrace man, like some corporate train wreck. I feel ashamed.”
Early evening drinkers in the Pyramid Alehouse opposite the Seattle Mariners’ baseball stadium were in no mood to give the world’s biggest car maker an even break last night. And the next couple of weeks look to be make-or-break time for General Motors and the other “big three” US car makers, Ford and Chrysler, as Congressional Democrats seek to add car makers to the US Treasury’s $700 billion economic rescue package for financial institutions. This would give the car manufacturers access to short-term funds totalling around $25 billion. Read the rest of this entry »

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Who are the Architects of Economic Collapse? Will an Obama Administration Reverse the Tide?

Posted by seumasach on November 10, 2008

Michel Chossudovsky

Global Research

9th November, 2008

The October 2008 financial meltdown is not the result of a cyclical economic phenomenon. It is the deliberate result of US government policy instrumented through the Treasury and the US Federal Reserve Board.

This is the most serious economic crisis in World history.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Stunned Icelanders Struggle After Economy’s Fall

Posted by seumasach on November 10, 2008

The Spectre of times to be: the UK appears to be on the verge of something like this.

Sarah Lyall

New York Times

8th November, 2008

REYKJAVIK, Iceland — The collapse came so fast it seemed unreal, impossible. One woman here compared it to being hit by a train. Another said she felt as if she were watching it through a window. Another said, “It feels like you’ve been put in a prison, and you don’t know what you did wrong.”

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Peter Schiff – “Obama’s Solution For The Economy”

Posted by seumasach on November 10, 2008

 

JClarkson’s Blog

Click on link above to view video

The audio clip from November 5th, 2008 is at the bottom of this post.  For those of you who do not know who Peter Schiff is and are curious, let me give you a little background from his Wikipedia page:

Peter D. Schiff is the president of Euro Pacific Capital Inc., a brokerage firm based in Darien, Connecticut.  He graduated from the University of California, Berkeley in 1987 with a degree in finance and accounting.  He was an economic adviser for the Ron Paul campaign in the 2008 Republican Party primaries.  In an August 2006 interview Schiff generated much controversy when he repeated his long-held investment thesis: “The United States economy is like the Titanic and I am here with the lifeboat trying to get people to leave the ship …I see a real financial crisis coming for the United States.” On May 16, 2006 in debate on Fox News, Schiff accurately had forecast that the U.S. housing market was a bubble that would soon come to bust.   On December 13, 2007 in a Bloomberg interview on the show Open Exchange, Schiff further added that he felt that the crisis would extend to the credit card lending industry.

Of course, here is the video from CNBC that aired on August 28, 2006where Peter Schiff accurately predicts the crisis that we are in now.  Art Laffer, who was former President Reagan’s Economic Advisor, bets him that his predictions are false and there will be no economic crash.  Oh, how I wish Mr. Laffer was right.

Read the rest of this entry »

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IMF must end its “imperialist” ways-France

Posted by smeddum on November 10, 2008

“the institution must improve its public relations”

Lagarde is obviously trying to help resuscitate the IMF with some kind of makeover. The imperialist ways of the IMF stem simply from the fact that it is largely controlled from Washington and London. There is nothing to stop the G20 itself from raising and administering any bailout fund.

 

IMF must end its “imperialist” ways-France

Reuters, Sunday November 9 2008 Guardian

SAO PAULO, Nov 9 (Reuters) – Several countries are deeply scarred by the “imperialist” approach taken by International Monetary Fund in past lending packages and the institution must improve its public relations, France said on Sunday. Read the rest of this entry »

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Epochal Transformation Accelerates As Global Financial Matrix Disintegrates

Posted by seumasach on November 8, 2008

 

T. Anthony Michael

truthseeker2@embarqmail.com 
11/07/08

Now that the genie is out of the bottle, worldwide economic, political and social events will proceed with the inexorable force of destiny. The forthcoming changes, shifts and breaks with the past that are delineated below do concern the unsavory business of WHAT, positively, will not be brought into the future. This is of critical importance. Why? Because those who do not know, and understand, and heed history, are always, always forced to repeat it.

Read the rest of this entry »

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