In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘stagflation’

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.

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U.S. in Crisis Mode — What’s Next?

Posted by smeddum on October 19, 2008

U.S. in Crisis Mode — What’s Next?
By Olivier Garret, CEO
Casey Research – The Casey Report goldseek.news

In the last few weeks, it has become clear that the current financial meltdown is not our usual, run-of-the-mill crisis. It’s supersized, inexorably linked to the rest of the world, ruled by chaos, and precariously perched atop a mountain of debt. ”What makes this crisis different from some of the earlier ones,” says IMF Historian James Boughton, “is that the interlinkages among financial institutions are much greater now than they used to be.” Read the rest of this entry »

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