ok whats the dream best case scenario?like when are we gonna be near the top of the peak again?
12/11/2008 6:17:19 PM
we gotta hit the bottom first, and then start a recovery. We're still headed in the wrong direction.It'll be a while.
12/11/2008 6:29:02 PM
i dont see it going much more rock bottom than this...like 6 months tops
12/11/2008 6:36:52 PM
Stocks are going to take a fucking beating today.
12/12/2008 9:20:19 AM
12/12/2008 9:21:27 AM
LoneSnark
12/12/2008 9:40:43 AM
12/12/2008 5:26:52 PM
^I'm confused about what you are trying to say. The dollar had been dropping for the past 6 or 7 years before the trend reversed at the end of the summer. Now the dollar is gaining against most other currencies. Do you expect that trend to reverse once again, in the midst of a global recession that is likely to impact many other countries far more than us? What is a dollar "crash" if 7 years of devaluation doesn't qualify?
12/12/2008 6:24:33 PM
Maybe those countries are trying to prop up the dollar because they realize if the US economy goes to shit, then the entire world economy will go to shit. It doesn't seem like it's working either.
12/13/2008 2:23:43 PM
i was just catching up on some old Colbert Reports, and just watched the one from November 19 where Colber talks about Phil Gramm's comments about the economy. Gramm says: "The markets have worked better than you might have thought"Colbert's response reminds me of the idealouges here still trying to defend how "impressive" our economy is:"It's true. You might have thought that by now we'd be driving spike-covered motorcycles over a barren hellscape, sword fighting over food and gas, wearing jackets made of human skin. But..... we are not. Thank you free market."http://www.comedycentral.com/colbertreport/full-episodes/index.jhtml?episodeId=209956
12/20/2008 3:50:14 PM
12/20/2008 7:02:10 PM
A ray of sunshine! Experts: Economy will begin recovery in late 2009
1/6/2009 2:28:21 AM
Being right or wrong on a general prediction isn't really an indicator that you contributed any value to the discussion. I could say "NC State will win a national championship sometime!" and be right when the chess club does indeed win a national championship in 2020. As for 'the impressive US economy', nobody intelligent actually sat and argued with you that the economy was a 3rd world sham dressed up in pretty power points.We just railed on you nonstop for posting daily 'positive news' as if it somehow proved your vacant point.This thread then, ironically, has become a rolling troll of you by you. A tribute to your own absurdity.
1/6/2009 2:45:17 AM
1/6/2009 3:51:35 AM
1/6/2009 9:45:08 AM
1/6/2009 10:02:46 AM
^ 1. Fuck you.2. The U.S. economy was, is, and will continue to be impressive. 3. I was wrong about the recession. In my defense, I presented hard facts and sound opinions to support my position--and I wasn't the only reasonably intelligent to highly intelligent person who didn't see it coming as bad as it has.4. FWIW, concerning your mancrush on Peter Schiff, if you predict doom and gloom long enough, one day you'll be right. To his credit, at least Schiff gets this much--were you aware of this?Don't Blame Capitalism
1/7/2009 4:19:25 AM
1/7/2009 7:31:38 AM
^ Let us be fair. Would anyone else have done anything differently? Everything you vehimently blame Bush for enjoyed complete bi-partisan support. Everything, from ignoring the problem to bailing out the causes. As such, an Al Gore or John Kerry in the white house would not have changed anything but which side of the issue Republicans fell upon. If it had been a democrat pushing the bailout a few more republicans would have balked and a few more democrats would have supported the measures to no effect. As such, blame those really responsible: the entire city of Washington.
1/7/2009 10:39:06 AM
1/7/2009 10:42:55 AM
1/7/2009 10:55:53 AM
1/7/2009 11:13:03 AM
The 62-odd trillion is the gross notional amount, not net exposure. As per the Lehman settlement, net exposure is but a fraction of total notional amount. The CDS market is far more sound than some alarmist like to portend. What the system needs is more transparency. Financial institutions do not know the net exposure of their counterparties, thus are unable to fully asses counterparty risks. There are already private initiatives to correct this, but facilitation from regulators, I think, would be welcome by the industry. By the way, Buffet, who coined the phrase "financial weapons of mass destruction," already claimed ignorance of the CDS market. What sense does it make, then, to take his analysis seriously? If a prominent author doesn't understand the concept of ebooks, should we consider his analysis of the ebook industry prophetic?[Edited on January 7, 2009 at 12:35 PM. Reason : .]
1/7/2009 12:21:29 PM
someone in chichat posted LOL:http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2009/01/07/porn-industry-seeks-federal-bailout/
1/7/2009 3:22:46 PM
I fucking loathe Bush.but it annoys the piss out of me when people pin all of our economic woes on him. Sure, neglect played a part, but there are so many other factors involved, on which a few people have touched on in this thread.[Edited on January 8, 2009 at 8:59 AM. Reason : asfdasfasf]
1/8/2009 8:56:58 AM
http://www.forbes.com/opinions/2009/01/07/recession-stimulus-spending-oped-cx_nr_0108roubini.htmlthis guy paints a pretty bad picture
1/8/2009 10:46:53 AM
CNN is showing IOUSA (http://www.iousathemovie.com/) it's really interesting
1/10/2009 2:12:46 PM
haha the steve parnell/steve martin/amy phoeler(sp?) snl clip was goodwhere exactly do we get this "saved" money?
1/10/2009 2:33:46 PM
1/10/2009 3:00:31 PM
Just the Facts: The Administration's Unheeded Warnings About the Systemic Risk Posed by the GSEs
1/10/2009 7:15:56 PM
1/10/2009 7:17:04 PM
spookyjon, Talk about overstatement. OMG!!!! UNEMPLOYMENT IS UP TO 7%, THIS IS JUST LIKE THE FUCKING GREAT DEPRESSION!!!!11111Of course, I'm sure the fear mongering by Democrats has nothing at all to do with trying to get their political agenda past the American people.[Edited on January 10, 2009 at 7:45 PM. Reason : Things are bad. They are not that bad. Not even fucking close.]
1/10/2009 7:43:54 PM
U6 is up over 13%, part time employment has doubled over the course of 2008, those numbers are much more relevant than your U3 number. Please find some supporting evidence that they aren't.
1/10/2009 8:55:35 PM
Socks``,The reason I posted that picture is because that was some baller-ass protest sign penmanship going on. I just came across the picture and thought it was awesome. People should make signs of that caliber now. That being said, sorry to disturb the sand in your vagina.luv,jon
1/10/2009 10:16:09 PM
i agree some time was taken on those signs.
1/11/2009 2:21:59 PM
natteringnaybob, We already had this discussion. There are plenty of good reasons why U6 is not the best measurement of cyclical unemployment, no matter what you read on your favorite blogs. Primarily, there are plenty of reasons for people to move to part time that are unrelated to the business cycle. For example, if you're working at GM and you get shifted from full to part-time, this probably has more to do with the US losing its comparative advantage in auto-manufacturing than it does with the current recession (don't bother arguing this because I'm not in the mood to hear what you really think is going on). So, I will just focus on explaining to you why U6 is not helpful for comparing this recession to previous recessions. U6 is mostly useless for comparing this recession to previous recessions because we only have data on U6 going back to the mid-1990's. As a result, we have no idea what U6 unemployment was during our worst recessions. If we're talking about the Great Depression specifically (as I was), unemployment (as measured as people out of work, but actively seeking employment, a measure essentially the same as U3 though I don't know if it was called that at the time) reached about 25% at its peak. We can only guess how much larger U6 unemployment would have been measured at during this time, but by definition it would have been larger than 25% (more than twice the size of current U6 measurements). So, like I said, this recession is still NO WHERE CLOSE to what we experienced during the Great Depression. http://www2.census.gov/prod2/statcomp/documents/CT1970p1-05.pdf Please get off your U3-U6 hobby horse. Repeating what you read on The Big Picture doesn't impress me.
1/11/2009 2:49:06 PM
i like the action-beacon lines around "not"
1/11/2009 3:03:03 PM
marko,Why do you hate America?]
1/11/2009 3:33:10 PM
1/11/2009 3:40:49 PM
^ Even worst case scenarios projections don't show us reaching Depression-era unemployment levels. According to estimates by Christina Romer (chair of CEA) and Jared Bernstein, unemployment is predicted to reach 9% without a stimulus plan and they cite that some projections go as high as 11%. That is still far less than half of the Depression-era peak of 25% and there are still other projections that cite much lower numbers. http://otrans.3cdn.net/45593e8ecbd339d074_l3m6bt1te.pdfThe reality is that we are possibly facing the worst recession since 1982. But there is almost no chance at all that we are looking at another Great Depression. The more you look at the numbers (instead of the rhetoric) the more you will realize that. That isn't to down play our problems. Things will get pretty bad (and personally I believe there is very little the government can do about it that hasn't already been done). But we need to keep things in perspective. This is an economic slow down, not a total collapse. The Great Depression of the 1930's set the stage for Franklin Roosevelt and his Democratic congress to lead the greatest expansion of the federal government in the history of our union. An expansion that totally reshaped the role we expect government to play in our economy and in our lives. What has the 2008 recession set the stage for??? Building a lot of new roads and bridges.[Edited on January 11, 2009 at 7:12 PM. Reason : ``]
1/11/2009 7:03:15 PM
1/11/2009 7:54:32 PM
^ i never said we should sit back and relax, i just said that comparing it to the Great Depression is unreasonable. And there are plenty of people doing it. Even if spookyjon is saying he only posted that picture because it looked cool (thanks Chit-Chat!), everyone from Paul Krugman to the fucking History Channel are drawing parallels between the two time periods. It's really unjustified (and if you agree with me about this, I'm not sure what you were complaining about). Now, what should we do to ease the recession? Well, I personally don't think that there is much more we CAN do. As I noted in my previous thread, the primary causes of this recession are "supply side" shocks that a fiscal stimulus will not help. The fiscal stimulus might help correct for any reduction in aggregate demand that is caused by people panicing about these supply-side factors (which obviously has nothing to do with political fear-mongering on both sides of the aisle), but that isn't the biggest problem we're facing. But don't take my word for it. Even according to Christina Romer, after BILLIONS of dollars of fiscal stimulus will STILL be left with an unemployment rate of 7.6% at the end of 2010, which is only 1% point lower than the 8.7% of unemployment that she expects without stimulus. And that's coming from someone that is supposedly OPTIMISTIC about the prospects of this package. Is this really worth adding billions of dollars to the national debt? Especially considering the consequences that an aging population will have for future budget decisions (Medicare isn't actually free you know)? I personally have my doubts. The Democrats used to have their doubts too...until they started winning elections. I guess this is how you do it. Spend lots of money and hope people love you for it. [Edited on January 11, 2009 at 8:42 PM. Reason : ``]
1/11/2009 8:38:14 PM
1/11/2009 11:20:41 PM
1/11/2009 11:40:42 PM
natteringnaybob, appeals to authority do not convince me very much. "How many econ bloggers can you name that agree with your position!?!?" isn't a game i'm going to play. If you can deal with my criticisms of their arguments then do so.Otherwise, quit strolling me. No matter how many times you ask, I'm not meeting you in the Bragaw restroom.
1/12/2009 12:40:27 AM
i'll see your "appeal to authority" and raise you an "ad hominem"gg socks.btw, dipshit, you still didnt explain how obama is "responsible" for the bailout.
1/12/2009 12:46:55 AM
Obama pledges major bailout changes
1/12/2009 1:47:44 AM
joe_schmoe, You should prob look up what "ad hominem" means. It would help in future discussions. Also, if you are unsatisfied with my previous response to your obtuse question, I apologize. I will do better next time. Have a nice day. --Socks``
1/12/2009 5:58:38 AM
This thread and many others in soap box brings to mind an excellent quote I saw over at TPM that really needs to be read and thought about. I see a lot of fucking posturing and throwing shit, instead of offering real solutions. I thought I would share it here.
1/12/2009 10:51:40 AM
Dearest Socksthank you for your concern. although i suggest that perhaps you review the material before attempting to give a lecture.for instance, when you avoid the question and instead bait the target with accusations of sexual impropriety
1/12/2009 11:18:08 AM