In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘stop the bailout’

What’s Obama smiling about?

Posted by seumasach on April 18, 2009

Michael Harris

Ottawa Sun

17th April, 2009

The Obama presidency is becoming a reverse fairy tale: The prince is turning into a frog

Elected as an anti-war candidate, he has dispatched 21,000 more troops to Afghanistan, stepped up CIA drone killings in Pakistan, and given the order for the world’s most sophisticated navy to blow away three pirates in a skiff. Like his predecessor, the current Chider-in-Chief has lectured European nations on their failure to supply more troops to the mission. Don’t they know NATO is just another American division? 

As for Iraq, the promise to end the war is turning into a Clintonian exercise in twisted diction. It all depends on what “withdrawal” means. The dates for leaving are as blurred as a bad forgery. It doesn’t matter. The president can hardly say he’s pulling out when as many as 50,000 U.S. combat troops are staying behind to guard the gas station. 

What about integrity in government? Judging by his gutter-ball series of appointments and attempted appointments, I am beginning to think that either his vetting process was actually looking for crooks or the president is moving in the wrong circles. 

Obama put a tax-cheat in the U.S. Treasury, tried to put an even bigger tax-cheat in Health, and only reluctantly dropped an accused influence peddler as commerce secretary. He can’t even get a Kennedy into the Vatican as America’s ambassador. Didn’t he know the Pope doesn’t approve of abortion? Didn’t any of the Chicago millionaires around the president know that Caroline Kennedy does? 

Remember all that change coming? George Bush spied on Americans illegally and then said it was OK because the terrorist surveillance program was all about national security. Candidate Obama and his running mate were shocked and appalled. 

But in the first court test of those illegal wiretaps, Jewel vs. National Security Agency, the Obama justice department moved that the case of an American citizen be dismissed because “state secrets” might be revealed. 

Wasn’t that the whole point! Dirty little secrets about crimes committed by government and the telecom companies were supposed to be revealed. Otherwise, why was Obama shocked and appalled when Bush broke the law in the first place? 

Obama was once all in favour of truth in government. When the Bush administration recalled the U.S. ambassador to Armenia, John Evans, for using the word “genocide” to describe what happened back in 1915, then Sen. Obama noted the “cowardice” of the state department. He added that “America deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian genocide and responds forcefully to all genocides. I intend to be that leader.” 

But in Turkey, President Obama became a sly diplomat, refusing to use the word “genocide.” “If they (the Turkish and Armenian people) can move forward and deal with a difficult and tragic history, then I think the entire world should encourage that.” Turkey’s help in Iraq and the guarantee of safe transit of oil across the Caucasus are apparently still needed. 

The list goes on — denouncing torture but no torture trials, not putting war costs in his nation-killing budget, mute on inevitable tax increases … 

And then there is the economy. Appalled as a candidate at the profligacy of the Bush years, the president has made his predecessor look like a piker. He has misappropriated money from the overwhelming majority of responsible citizens of the United States to fork it over to the most rapacious practitioners of organized theft the world has ever seen. 

Makes you wonder what the guy on the big lily pad is really smiling about. 

MHARRIS@CFRA.COM

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Salbuchi – Global Financial Collapse – Part 2

Posted by seumasach on April 5, 2009

 

 Mr Salbuchi draws on Argentina’s experience over the last thirty or forty years to provide invaluable insight into the current crisis. However, the model cannot be applied mechanically to this global crisis. Salbuchi assumes the point at issue , namely, the continued ability of the USA to manipulate the situation to its own advantage. In doing so he ignores the entire counter-globalisation movement at both state and non-state level. Yes, the struggle for a new world order has begun, but it’s outcome can be based on multipolarity as well as US hegemony. Specifically, Salbuchi ignores the fact that the process of creating an alternative to the dollar as a global currency has already begun. A great video, with a salutary warning, but unduly pessimistic.

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Salbuchi – Global Financial Collapse – Part 1

Posted by seumasach on April 5, 2009

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Obama, allies aren’t on same page as G20 opens

Posted by seumasach on April 1, 2009

“In an interview with London’s Financial Times published Friday, German leader Angela Merkel hadn’t backed off from her emphasis on regulation instead of spending.

“The crisis did not take place because we were spending too little but because we were spending too much to create growth that was not sustainable. It isn’t just that the banks took over too many risks. Governments allowed them to do so by neglecting to set the necessary (financial market) rules and, for instance in the U.S., by increasing the money supply too much,” she said.

The United States and England , however, are unlikely to support hasty moves to new regulation.”

“Self-interest wins in the end always, and the United States and the U.K. get more out of financial services than anyone else. We have the two world financial capitals. It’s not in our interest to have other people write the regulations or have regulations that try to average across many nations,” said Vincent Reinhart , a former top economist at the Federal Reserve.

Likewise, he cautioned, big nations such as China and Russia , and the smaller but important European powers, see it in their interest to impose new rules on London and New York .

Yahoo

31st March, 2009

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Geithner’s ‘Dirty Little Secret’: The Entire Global Financial System is at Risk

Posted by seumasach on March 31, 2009

When the Solution to the Financial Crisis becomes the Cause
F.William Engdahl
30th March, 2009

GlobalResearch.ca

US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has unveiled his long-awaited plan to put the US banking system back in order. In doing so, he has refused to tell the ‘dirty little secret‘ of the present financial crisis. By refusing to do so, he is trying to save de facto bankrupt US banks that threaten to bring the entire global system down in a new more devastating phase of wealth destruction.

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Time to stop the rip-off

Posted by seumasach on March 29, 2009

“This is the biggest rip-off in the history of man. There is no end in sight. When will the Obama administration get it? Obama will have to learn the toughest decision there is in business – when it’s time to stop throwing good money after bad money.”

The crisis in the United States has taken a dangerous turn over the past week, a turn that may prove to be the undoing of the Barack Obama presidency. 
Hossein Askari and Noureddine Krichene 

Asia Times

27th March, 2009

On January 20, Obama stepped into much more than the worst economic and financial crisis since the Great Depression. He inherited the helm of a country ravaged by 30 years of runaway human greed and a complicit government that rewarded it. Obama now finds himself in the middle of a perfect tempest, buffeted on the one side by a relentless financial and economic downturn and on the other a bewildered nation waking up to the landscape of unparalleled economic injustice that had been hidden out of sight with most Americans working hard just to get by. 

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Gordon Brown seeking to win over US bankers with his ‘vision’ for global economy

Posted by seumasach on March 26, 2009

Brown continues his strutting and fretting on the world stage tirelessly pursuing the chimera of another century(or is it a thousand years) of Anglo-saxon world hegemony. Given that the game is up Brown has to be commended for his “never say die” attitude, However, said or unsaid, the empire is dead.

ITNT noted the split between Brown and King back in September 2008

Telegraph

25th March, 2009

The Prime Minister will be grilled by Wall Street figures at an event in New York on Wednesday, before meeting UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon.

The talks come on the second leg of his tour to lay the groundwork for next week’s crucial G20 summit in London.

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Goldman Sachs, Welfare Queen

Posted by seumasach on March 26, 2009

Wall Street’s most storied firm is surviving on taxpayer dollars

Daniel Gross, Slate.com

Financial Post

While it was singed in the credit meltdown, Goldman Sachs, the alpha male of Wall Street, has emerged as a survivor. The cover of last week’s Barron’s heralded the resurrection of Goldman and Morgan Stanley – “the sole standouts,” as Andrew Bary called them. The company’s shares have rallied back above $100, and its market capitalization is nearly $47 billion. Goldman’s emergence from the wreckage could be seen as yet another glorious chapter for the firm. Charles Ellis, in his book about Goldman, The Partnership, lionized the firm as the only company “with such strengths that it operates with almost no external constraints in virtually any financial market it chooses, on the terms it chooses, on the scale it chooses, when it chooses, and with the partners it chooses.” For the paperback, Ellis might want to add the following proviso: so long as the government is willing to give it billions of dollars.

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Bailout money is flowing abroad

Posted by seumasach on March 15, 2009

But City experts analysing the scheme for The Independent say large quantities of money will simply end up abroad because so many of the gilts are held by foreign investors. They fear that they will hoard the cash, which will be of no benefit to the British economy, or dump it in favour of safer currencies, which could cause a run on sterling. More than a third of gilts are owned by foreign entities, official statistics reveal, and there are doubts about how effective the policy will be if that sort of proportion of the new money is diverted abroad.

Independent

14th March, 2009

The Bank is in the process of purchasing about £75bn of government securities, or gilts, over a three-month period, the first instalment of a massive £150bn programme. The Bank is effectively converting these government securities or gilts into cash and bank balances which, it is hoped, will be used to support lending and spending in the UK and boost the economy.

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The Upcoming Political Crisis in Washington

Posted by seumasach on March 10, 2009

David Gordian

Global Research

9th March, 2009

In recent days we have seen even mainstream Democratic figures as Joe Stiglitz and Paul Krugman sound the alarm on what seems to be uncertainty in the Obama administration. Stiglitz, Krugman et al. are following in their essential critique a path well worn over the past few weeks by a range of commentators to be found as much among the Austrians as those on the liberal-to-left part of the spectrum. The fundamental point is, of course, that it is now clear to all but the militantly unreflective that Obama can – perhaps – save the Real economy or – perhaps – save Finance (i.e. Bank bond- and shareholders), but certainly not both. The increasing, but still relatively gentle, criticism of Stiglitz, Krugman and their ilk is owing to the fact that it is becoming all too clear that Obama is still unwilling to engage Finance in what might turn out to be the greatest intramural fight capitalism has ever seen.

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Brits to win out against Euro

Posted by seumasach on March 10, 2009

No one can dispute that the British government and financial authorities have taken decisive action: they have channeled an unimaginable sum into the hands of the bankers , thereby bankrupting the nation and effecting an enormous redistribution of wealth to the wealthiest and at the expense of 60 million people. Brown has been energetically trying to draw Europe into similar suicidal measures, making it into an Anglo-saxon style oligarchy, but to little avail. Evans-Pritchard now aligns himself with leftists like Will Hutton in supporting these measures under the guise of fighting deflation. So this article is partly sour grapes reflecting Britains evident loss of influence, and partly just sheer lunacy as he talks up Britain on the eve of its catastrophic collapse, long predicted in these columns.

“Debt and deflation are a deadly mix. ” So let’s go for even more debt, and inflation, and sink our currency whose status we are completely dependent on for the import of food and other necessities

Thanks to the Bank it’s a crisis; in the eurozone it’s a total catastrophe

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

IHT

8th March, 2009

The Bank of England may have averted a catastrophe. If ever there was a time when this country needed its own monetary authorities – acting with wartime urgency – this is the moment.

Those nations with fossilised or timid central banks clinging to outdated ideologies are not so lucky. Even less lucky are those such as Spain and Ireland that have surrendered policy to a body that is deaf to their pleas and constitutionally obliged to ignore the welfare of their particular societies. They face crucifixion.

Spain’s agony is already well advanced. Industrial output has fallen 24pc. Some 352,000 people have lost their jobs in two months. BBVA expects unemployment to reach 20pc next year, touching 4.5m. Premier Jose Luis Zapatero can do nothing as long as Spain remains in monetary union.

He cannot devalue to claw back 30pc in lost labour competitiveness against EMU’s German bloc, or take emergency steps to slow the property crash. In an odd lapse last week – perhaps a slip – he advised Spaniards that the best thing to do in these dark times was to ****.

Yes, it is dangerous for the Bank of England to buy up a third of all long-dated gilts. But it would be even more dangerous to allow deflation to run its course in an economy where debt levels have reached such extremes. Debt and deflation are a deadly mix.

The errors that led to our current predicament are well-known. A small army of economists – Austrians, Monetarists, and Keynesians – warned that central banks were playing with fire by fixing the price of credit too low and ignoring asset bubbles. The $6.7 trillion in reserve accumulation by China, Japan, and the petro-powers drove bond yields too low for safety.

Credit signals were gravely distorted. In Britain, Gordon Brown poured petrol on the fire by pushing the fiscal deficit to 3pc of GDP at the top of the cycle. Wretched man. However much we rage at Sir Fred or Citi-wrecker Chuck Prince, let us not forget that this crisis was confected by governments. To blame the free market is to miss the bigger point.

But I digress. We are now faced with the post-debt wreckage. The task at hand is to hold our societies together as best we can. One dreads to think what would have happened if the Hoover-Brüning nostalgics had succeeded in blocking every remedy.

As it is we have seen industrial production collapse in every region. The drops in January were: Japan (-31pc), Korea (-26pc), Russia (-16pc), Brazil (-15pc), Italy (-14pc), Germany (-12pc). Falls that took two years from late 1929 have been compressed into five months.

Those who say this is nothing like the Great Depression are complacent. Household debt is higher today, and UK banks are in worse shape. (No bank of size failed in the British Empire during the slump). Britain’s economy contracted by 5.6pc from peak to trough in the early 1930s (Eichengreen). Some put the figure at nearer 8pc. We may surpass that this time.

America suffered worse. Real GDP fell 28pc. But the worst occurred in the second leg, after the heinous policy blunders of late 1931. Reading contemporary accounts, it is clear that hardly anybody – not even Keynes or Fisher – realised that the world was slipping into a depression during the first 18 months.

Nobel laureate Paul Krugman says the Fed has been as far behind the curve today as it was then, given the faster pace of collapse. It is bizarre that Ben Bernanke has not started to buy US Treasuries a full three months after he floated the idea, despite a yield rise of 80 basis points.

He has been stymied by the hawks. Kansas chief Thomas Hoenig said last week that the top priority is to drain liquidity before recovery later this year sets off inflation. Well, Mr Hoenig said last May that inflation psychology was gaining a hold “not seen since the 1970s and early 1980s” with a risk that inflation would become “embedded in the economy.” The price spike broke within weeks. If his model was wrong then, why is it right now?

As for the ECB, it has not reached the starting line. Jean-Claude Trichet insists that there is no danger of deflation in Europe. What is the weather like on his planet, asked Mr Krugman.

The ECB has cut rates to 1.5pc, but since they need to be minus 1pc on the Taylor Rule, this leaves the breach as wide as ever. The Bundesbank is blocking any serious move towards quantitative easing.

Given that Germany’s economy is imploding (Deutsche Bank sees 5pc contraction this year) one wonders if the Bundesbank would be less hawkish if the D-mark still existed. Even their hard-money brothers at Switzerland’s SNB are cash printers these days.

So has monetary policy in euroland been paralysed by squabbles at a calamitous moment, blighting every member state? Almost certainly.

I’ll take the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street any day, warts and all.

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