Skybird |
10-09-08 10:17 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hylander_1314
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Can'T disagree with him on most things. Just that lack of monitoring (lack of regulation) allowed business rules that ecouraged risky business models that encouraged low criterions for credit and that encouraging bigger spending than what epopel could afford by their income - that he does not see. So, the current crisis should be allowed to kill banks and business pratcices that accepted to much risk by thinling they could take the profit from it by selling the risk to the rtest of ther world. but in the market emerging after that crisis, there surely must be rules that are tight and strict in that bilances must be much more trasnparent and have less opportunities to hide unwelcome dinformation, and risks from giving credit must be accepted by the giving banik so that it has a vital self-interest to insist on healthy conditions being fulfilled in order to get credit from it. This, and some other rules, must be enforced on the business, sinc eit has proven that it will go into the oppopsite direciton with today's consequences if you leafve it to itself. The good news here is that the Fed or Washington is no longer in the position to prevent this anymore, after years of blockade and rejection. American finance rules and models no longer will dominate global markets as they did before. The price for that victory is very high and costly, though. It could include not only the collapse of national economies, but the bancruptcy of whole states.
Instead of adding more digits to that damn counting clock, the US has the duty to finally start to pay back it's debts which are money that got spend althiugh it was not owned. By that, as many digits as possible must be made obsolete on that clock - that would be the right way - not just getting familiar with the idea of even more rising debts. a redution and balöancing of the mad and crazy import.export-deficit also is mandatory. You can only spend as much as you earn, you have to pay back your debts - that should not be too difficult for any nation to understand. Spending more than what one earns, is not illustrating a functioning system - it illustrates a failing system.
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