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View Full Version : Asking the million dollar questions...


TarJak
05-23-10, 10:32 PM
Clarke and Dawe explore the European debt fiasco. (http://www.abc.net.au/news/video/2010/05/20/2905304.htm)

nikimcbee
05-23-10, 10:40 PM
Clarke and Dawe explore the European debt fiasco. (http://www.abc.net.au/news/video/2010/05/20/2905304.htm)

Fair enough:har:
Must be using obama math/:haha:

ivank
05-23-10, 10:57 PM
:haha::har::rotfl2:

Admiral8Q
05-24-10, 03:31 AM
Hahahaha!!! So true, so true... We're all doomed by these politicians...:nope:

Skybird
05-24-10, 04:46 AM
Enjoy the laughter as long as it still could last. The fiscal structure and total debts level expressed in % of the GDP between the US and Greece is very similiar. If you read the small signs, you see that the wolfpack of speculators is already flocking together to mount the allout attack on the US as well. Even before Portugal, Spain, Italy or France, the UK's and the US's financial situation is much worse and far more threatening. The US plays on the same level - if not even a worse - like Greece. Economists like Laurence Kotlikoff (Boston university) have shown that the to-be-expected income of the American state in the forseeable future of coming years is 16 times smaller than the spendings. In case of Greece, that factor is 17. Or as Kotlikoff put it in a German interview some days ago: already in the near future the Greeks will be better off than the Americans.

But in a way Clarke and Dawe are right with their satire: black humour is the only way how one could bear the madness of the present and the threat of the future. As far as my humble self is concerned: I have completely run out of advise, any idea I could think of - I can show to fail for sure, but not to work.

TarJak
05-24-10, 06:18 AM
http://img535.imageshack.us/img535/1683/billgatesloan.jpg

Weiss Pinguin
05-24-10, 08:58 AM
http://cheezcomixed.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/129186822062907650.jpg

Jimbuna
05-24-10, 11:18 AM
I enjoyed the video link but it is rather worrying for our offspring don't tou think? :hmmm:

Skybird
05-24-10, 12:45 PM
I enjoyed the video link but it is rather worrying for our offspring don't tou think? :hmmm:

I don't understand the question. :88)

Jimbuna
05-24-10, 01:24 PM
I don't understand the question. :88)

The cuts in spending and the tighter measures that will be needed allied to possible tax rises and whatever else the politicians deem necessary will surely have an impact on the future adult generation/tax payers.....namely our offspring/children.

Schroeder
05-24-10, 01:45 PM
The cuts in spending and the tighter measures that will be needed allied to possible tax rises and whatever else the politicians deem necessary will surely have an impact on the future adult generation/tax payers.....namely our offspring/children.
Wasn't that always the plan to begin with?
Borrowing money left and right and leave it to our children's children to pay it back.
I believe every western country has been using this "strategy" for the last 40 odd years.
Unfortunately it seems we borrowed faster than our offspring could grow and now our spending is catching up with us and we have to pay the bill ourselves anyway.:dead:

UnderseaLcpl
05-24-10, 01:57 PM
Enjoy the laughter as long as it still could last. The fiscal structure and total debts level expressed in % of the GDP between the US and Greece is very similiar. If you read the small signs, you see that the wolfpack of speculators is already flocking together to mount the allout attack on the US as well. Even before Portugal, Spain, Italy or France, the UK's and the US's financial situation is much worse and far more threatening. The US plays on the same level - if not even a worse - like Greece. Economists like Laurence Kotlikoff (Boston university) have shown that the to-be-expected income of the American state in the forseeable future of coming years is 16 times smaller than the spendings. In case of Greece, that factor is 17. Or as Kotlikoff put it in a German interview some days ago: already in the near future the Greeks will be better off than the Americans.


A good analysis Sky, but I don't quite agree. The US does not play on the same level as Greece, and it is highly unlikely that the US will end up on the same level in the near future. In fact, it is likely that the E.U. as a whole demonstrate greater insolvency than the US for at least the next decade.

I have many reasons for this view, but foremost among them is the fact that the dollar is still the world's reserve currency. You need look no further than this matter with E.U. debt to see this. Whenever domestic markets look bad, investors, speculators, and traders alike flock to the dollar and the U.S. as their life raft. The resultant influx of economic activity bouys the dollar and spurs US markets. The domestic market in question then swings wildly downward until a stable level of economic activity is achieved. That is, where the newly devalued currency makes exports from the domestic export surge (often involving a significant number of exports to the US) and the recovery process can begin, only to be sabotaged again by out-of-control borrowing and spending by the state.

The only economy in the world that could really threaten the position of the US is that of China, but China's economy is, ironically, so heavily based on the US (imports, exports, currency holdings) that they are locked into playing second-fiddle for the time being.

The E.U. was never more than a fairly close third, in terms of fiscal viability. It was doomed to failure from the moment it expanded its responsibilities beyond regulating the Euro and brokering free-trade agreements. It simply wasn't yet ready to play on the same field as the US, much less undertake the same reckless spending policies.

That said, you are quite right about the long-term insolvency of the US economy. We may be able to maintain this debt-to-income ratio for far longer than other nations, but it can't last forever. The signs are already evident, as you pointed out. The DOW is set to plunge below the 10,000 watermark again, and God knows when it will manage to recover fully, if ever. We will eventually reach the point where the dollar ceases to be the world's reserve currency, and all nations heavily invested in it will suffer from the collapse. China will likely go down with us. The E.U. may or may not weather the storm, dependant upon how it acts over the next few years. It is all very uncertain.

What is certain is that the global economy is going to have an encounter with the "reset" button, so to speak, and we're going to see a major worldwide economic contraction within the next three or four decades. We've already charted a course that is disturbingly similar to that of the Great Depression; A worldwide contraction of currency supply followed by a decade of stagflation. If the reckless spending of the US government continues unabated, we will see an even more rapid decline as hyperinflation takes hold.

Jimbuna
05-24-10, 02:19 PM
Wasn't that always the plan to begin with?
Borrowing money left and right and leave it to our children's children to pay it back.
I believe every western country has been using this "strategy" for the last 40 odd years.
Unfortunately it seems we borrowed faster than our offspring could grow and now our spending is catching up with us and we have to pay the bill ourselves anyway.:dead:

Yeah, but the upward spiral of debt was always manageable without requiring the drastic measures that are now being voiced (I'm talking in terms of the UK here).

What we have now are unprecedented levels of debt...so bad that we are now spending more on debt/interest repayments than we currently spend on for example, defence.

Diopos
05-24-10, 02:53 PM
Or we could just go for the next war ...
Let me see... mmmm ....
Korean Torpedoes ....
Iranian uranium ...
War against terrorism part II ...
Unrest in the Ukrain ...
Another Balkan crisis ....



.

Skybird
05-24-10, 03:34 PM
http://www.briefing.com/GeneralContent/Investor/Active/ArticlePopup/ArticlePopup.aspx?SiteName=Investor&ArticleId=NS20100514150704AheadOfTheCurve

The conclusions I already see as optimistic, but primarily I post this for the numbers and tables anyway.

I also remind of that Moody earlier this year warned that America's triple-A rating is no longer to be taken for granted, and that China has massively cut the ammount of dollars and US bonds that it buys - they do not want it that much anymore since the alarm bells went off in Europe, since they risk to loose their own wealth when they stick to the dollar - that's the thing they have realised since some months now.

Read the signs.

You will not believe it, Lance. But you see, I have occasionally pointed out these trends since I met this forum roughly ten years ago. It will not be another ten years before we know the outcome for sure.

Wolfehunter
05-24-10, 03:46 PM
A good analysis Sky, but I don't quite agree. The US does not play on the same level as Greece, and it is highly unlikely that the US will end up on the same level in the near future. In fact, it is likely that the E.U. as a whole demonstrate greater insolvency than the US for at least the next decade.

I have many reasons for this view, but foremost among them is the fact that the dollar is still the world's reserve currency. You need look no further than this matter with E.U. debt to see this. Whenever domestic markets look bad, investors, speculators, and traders alike flock to the dollar and the U.S. as their life raft. The resultant influx of economic activity bouys the dollar and spurs US markets. The domestic market in question then swings wildly downward until a stable level of economic activity is achieved. That is, where the newly devalued currency makes exports from the domestic export surge (often involving a significant number of exports to the US) and the recovery process can begin, only to be sabotaged again by out-of-control borrowing and spending by the state.

The only economy in the world that could really threaten the position of the US is that of China, but China's economy is, ironically, so heavily based on the US (imports, exports, currency holdings) that they are locked into playing second-fiddle for the time being.

The E.U. was never more than a fairly close third, in terms of fiscal viability. It was doomed to failure from the moment it expanded its responsibilities beyond regulating the Euro and brokering free-trade agreements. It simply wasn't yet ready to play on the same field as the US, much less undertake the same reckless spending policies.

That said, you are quite right about the long-term insolvency of the US economy. We may be able to maintain this debt-to-income ratio for far longer than other nations, but it can't last forever. The signs are already evident, as you pointed out. The DOW is set to plunge below the 10,000 watermark again, and God knows when it will manage to recover fully, if ever. We will eventually reach the point where the dollar ceases to be the world's reserve currency, and all nations heavily invested in it will suffer from the collapse. China will likely go down with us. The E.U. may or may not weather the storm, dependant upon how it acts over the next few years. It is all very uncertain.

What is certain is that the global economy is going to have an encounter with the "reset" button, so to speak, and we're going to see a major worldwide economic contraction within the next three or four decades. We've already charted a course that is disturbingly similar to that of the Great Depression; A worldwide contraction of currency supply followed by a decade of stagflation. If the reckless spending of the US government continues unabated, we will see an even more rapid decline as hyperinflation takes hold.So which nation or peoples will benefit from this doom? Who will take the burden of this? Who will laugh at the rest of us? Somewhere out there someone or peoples are benefiting on the rest of us? No?

UnderseaLcpl
05-24-10, 07:01 PM
So which nation or peoples will benefit from this doom? Who will take the burden of this? Who will laugh at the rest of us? Somewhere out there someone or peoples are benefiting on the rest of us? No?

I don't really see any nation or people benefitting from this situation and I certainly don't see anyone laughing at it. The thing about modern macroeconomics is that when one party loses its share of the pie, someone else doesn't necessarily get a bigger share. Rather, the whole pie gets smaller.

There would undoubtedly be people who could benefit from this situtation - likely the most firmly entrenched interests with the largest capital reserves and real assets. As far as nations go, I think the US would ultimately come out on top (but it won't be easy), but it remains to be seen. We're still a few years away from utter fiscal meltdown, and a lot of things could change in that time.


You will not believe it, Lance..... Actually, I don't have any difficulty believing any of that. You and I are of common ground on some things, Sky, and the effects of reckless fiscal policy and market bubbles are among those, even if we don't always agree upon who is to blame. :salute:

However, I should like to point out that I didn't say that it would be a decade before we would know the outcome for sure. I said it would be at least a decade before the US is more insolvent than the EU. We can discuss this if you wish, but I will warn you that it may be a long discussion.

In all honesty, the ultimate outcome seems fairly apparent to me right now. Looking at the world economy as a whole, and the general response to the current crisis, and the sociopolitical structures of the major players, I'd say that this recession is a prelude to the calm before the storm. What we are seeing now is an unprecedented level of worldwide state measures to "fix" the recession, as well as the associated capital costs, but we aren't really seeing any growth to offset those costs. Most of these measures are based on very shortsighted long-term projections, and others are just outright fantasy.

But where the movement of nations and empires is measured in decades, the movement of the societal engines of commerce and industry is measured in seconds, minutes, days, months, and occassionally, years. As of now, we are still at the point where an influx of currency can generate temporary growth. In true Keynesian fashion, the struggling market is still grasping at the dollars thrown it by the state. There will be brief periods of resurgence, followed by stagnation, followed by a rally or a fall, followed by yet more state moneys. That wild ride will continue until the market starts figuring out that these pieces of paper we use as a medium of exchange are so abundant that they don't really mean much anymore. At that point, we had all best get our muckers on, because we are all going to be knee-deep in $hit. :dead:

Snestorm
05-24-10, 07:50 PM
Wasn't that always the plan to begin with?
Borrowing money left and right and leave it to our children's children to pay it back.
I believe every western country has been using this "strategy" for the last 40 odd years.
Unfortunately it seems we borrowed faster than our offspring could grow and now our spending is catching up with us and we have to pay the bill ourselves anyway.:dead:

This is what I see as the collapse of socialism (both sides of The Atlantic).

The baby boomers are coming up to retirement age now, and the system(s) simply can't afford it. The political class are trying to offset this with mass immigration, but the resourses of the land can no longer even sustaine the current populations. Thus a population decrease, as dictated by nature. The longer the political class hold on to their power-base (socialism), the more long term damage they do to their own people.