I don't think that's really true. With the exception of the lates 70s early 80s, post war America was realtively a golden age. If we restrict our attention to white males then this is doubly true. Now how much of the change in circumstance is due to the civil and women's rights movement I am not sure. Few people really want to investigate that, including myself. But demand curves do slope downward, so its hard to image that ending an effective cartel on certain types of work didn't hurt the cartel.Things are changing. I had much of the perspective you are pushing throughout the 90s and even early into this decade. Now hopefully we are witness a second order effect and it will go a way on its own. But it may not and I think its important to take that possibility seriously.
1/1/2008 10:59:50 AM
1/1/2008 12:42:21 PM
Interesting read with respect to foreign debt purchases & USA impacthttp://www.ft.com/cms/s/6667a18a-b888-11dc-893b-0000779fd2ac.html
1/3/2008 9:18:50 AM
Ah, but you need to see that it is quite different. American citizens can default on every debt they owe and not threaten the American government's AAAA bond rating. Secondly, the U.S. Government wants what Americans produce and therefore only wants to borrow dollars, which it can always borrow from Americans if foreigners decide the risk is too great. The Ottoman Empire was not an economic powerhouse that made everything, like the U.S. both at the time and now. When the Ottoman Empire borrowed money it was to purchase what foreigners made, not what it itself made. This is why the Ottoman Empire borrowed money denominated in Dollars, Pounds, or Francs. America, on the other hand, only borrows money denominated in its own currency, Dollars, which it can print to pay back if WW3 breaks out.
1/3/2008 11:18:13 AM
1/3/2008 11:21:21 AM
1/3/2008 11:49:19 AM
^A hybrid. Indeed, the invest in Citi was corporate bonds which will automatically convert into stock. However, in general you can expect that the investment by Sovereign Wealth Funds will be equity investments.In contrast to "An Ottoman warning for indebted America" I actually though what we saw in the last year was dark matter in action. http://www.businessweek.com/the_thread/economicsunbound/archives/2005/12/dark_matter.htmlThe biggest driver behind the positive income flow to the US is that despite being a "net debtor" to the rest of the world, the rest of the world is earning a horrible return on its investments in the US while the US is earning a nice return on its foreign investment. This is a prime example of how this happens. Sovereign Wealth Funds are tripping over themselves to take big investments in established US names despite the shaky financial situation those names find themselves in. My advice to the banks and the brokers is to take as much of these guys money while the taking is good. The honest truth is that enough equity investment fix any solvency crisis.
1/3/2008 12:07:07 PM
Does that mean that the worst case scenario is that the investors get an annual percentage on the bonds, but if the bailout works and the stock price goes up they will be able to convert it to stock and reap greater benefits?[Edited on January 3, 2008 at 1:28 PM. Reason : l]
1/3/2008 1:27:29 PM
^ Yes. It is a very rosy position compared to other stake holders in these banks, but it is still quite bad compared to stake holders in companies that are not in trouble.
1/3/2008 1:31:56 PM
1/3/2008 1:59:18 PM
I wish I had money to play like that. I read about something similar back in the 80's when Salomon Brothers offered bonds to Warren Buffet to prevent a hostile takeover. Sounded too sweet to be true. Somewhat interesting considering Salomon Brothers is part of Citigroup now (one of the banks mentioned in that article.) We see how well it went for Salomon in the 80's.I wonder how this will play out in the stock market? My first thought is that these companies will be crippled by having to pay back the bonds, but if the stock does go up then converting the bonds to stock could represent growth and potential regime change. It's a tough call.[Edited on January 3, 2008 at 2:03 PM. Reason : l]
1/3/2008 2:02:34 PM
Maybe some sort of entity can use its money to quietly pump up the stocks of companies that are going to fail.
1/3/2008 3:51:40 PM
most of you are probably too young to remember, but back in the 80s the Japanese were buying a lot of stuff in the US. it wasn't during any sort of financial distress, but people back then were sounding the same alarms about power shifting to their hands.i don't think power will shift away from the US per se. especially not to those chaps in the desert - they'll run out of the black stuff soon enough. on a relative scale however, certain countries (mainly China and India) might be gaining a larger piece of the newly increased parts of the pie than the US. those two are giants that have hibernated way too long. with China and India we're looking at a multi-decade (perhaps spanning multiple centuries) of expansion. in terms of acquiring resources they may act as imperialists during their expansion; and we don't have a crystal ball, but i don't think looting and enslaving, or manifest destiny is written into their cultural DNA.
1/3/2008 4:32:32 PM
I'm seeing a lot of Americans investing in foreign businesses while trying to capitalize on foreign growth.I think with the dollar being so weak foreigners are going to use their increased buying power to buy pieces of American companies at a greater rate than we buy from them for a while.
1/3/2008 4:51:27 PM
1/3/2008 7:12:39 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22476544/won't quote the whole article but:Job creation down, unemployment up, recession very likely and decent chances that we're already in it but we won't know for a while because statistics are always slow to come out.
1/4/2008 3:05:20 PM
Yeah, the Fed is probably gonna cut rates again because of this.I know economies are pretty dynamic, but this U.S. Economy is far from impressive RIGHT NOW
1/4/2008 4:35:41 PM
Orignally I called for a US recession begining late Q2 early Q3 of 2008. Now it appears that my forecast was probably too late. Given the latest data a US recession now seems imminent. There are a lot of charts I could display but this is the most tellingThis is the unemployment rate since 1945. Note that unemployment has never made a false bottom with the possible slight exception 1965 -66 when recession was delayed by escalation of the Vietnam War. While I think it will be another month before we can say for sure that the US economy is entering recession, I now believe that we will be in recession by the end of the Q1, and there exists a strong possibility that the recession is begining in Jan.
1/5/2008 3:23:57 PM
Nice graph. We can really see how recessions have become both less severe and less frequent.
1/5/2008 6:13:28 PM
Recessions are only 'not severe' if you're not affected by them. Let's just hope this is quick and relatively painless so we can move on after a bit.
1/5/2008 6:32:52 PM
But I can still make statistical generations about recessions: The 2001 recession was less severe than the 1991 recession because it affected fewer people.
1/6/2008 2:11:52 AM
that chart is begging for a democrat to win in 2008[Edited on January 6, 2008 at 3:10 AM. Reason : ^did you mean generalizations? not trying to be a nazi, i like u as a poster of tsb]
1/6/2008 3:07:27 AM
^^^^The one ray of hope, although not an extremely strong one, is that the Fed is acting preemptively in lowering the Fed funds target rate. They have typically in the past not lowered rates until we were actually in a recession. Further, short term interest rates are much lower than they have been during the majority of past recessions. ^ drunknloaded, tell me again how a democrat would help?[Edited on January 6, 2008 at 8:23 AM. Reason : .]
1/6/2008 8:21:29 AM
Well, the concern is two fold.One, in the past recessions were essentially purposefully created by the Fed to bring down infaltion. That's not the case right now.Two, the concerns that promted me to predict recession in Q2 and the Fed to cut rates have not come to fruition yet. The CP spread and the TED spread takes at least 6 - 9 months to work through to the real economy. The concern for me is a recession within a recession.Also, short rates are lower primarily because inflaton is lower. Real short term rates are not that much lower.
1/6/2008 11:18:02 AM
1/6/2008 2:04:53 PM
1/6/2008 6:47:43 PM
I agree, the TED spread is very concerning. I definitely am not ruling out a recession and think the probability has risen significantly with the data we have seen released in the past month. Regarding real short term rates, it has been a mixed bag. We are about where we were in 2001, but are below where we were prior to the 81-82 and 90-91 recessions. (to get the below, I took the 12m moving avg of the 90-day T-Bill rate and subtracted the 12m moving average of CPI-U. Using 3M USD LIBOR yields roughly the same results, even with the relatively large spread)[Edited on January 6, 2008 at 6:52 PM. Reason : .][Edited on January 6, 2008 at 7:03 PM. Reason : .]
1/6/2008 6:49:55 PM
Regarding the Fed and recessions, I wouldn't characterize the Fed as intentionally causing recessions. Slower growth is merely a bi-product of removing excess liquidity in the market (with the aim of lowering inflation). For the long-term health of the economy, inflation is a much bigger threat than short-term growth.
1/6/2008 6:59:10 PM
Can we agree yet that this thread and the original post was a big joke?
1/8/2008 1:46:58 AM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7176255.stmML says we're in the first month of the recession now.
1/8/2008 9:26:58 AM
1/8/2008 10:35:42 AM
^^ Okay, I've been trying to give TSB a break from me, but that post is ridiculous. 1. The unemployment rate, which is a lagging indicator, is at 5%. The average unemployment rate for decades has been around 6%--so we're obviously below the historical average. 2. It's only Q1 of '08. Until I see two or more consecutive quarters of flat or negative growth in the GDP, a recession has not happened. And even if it does, the impressive U.S. economy will weather it well. I mean, how many economies would have remained as good as the U.S. economy has with all that it's been through these last few years? 3. The following is from the article you posted. Leave out much?
1/8/2008 11:34:12 AM
hooksaw the current rut in the US economy is a conspiracy by the liberals to usurp confidence in the republican administration to help the democrats in the upcoming election right?
1/8/2008 1:48:23 PM
How is posting a link to a website so bad?
1/8/2008 2:59:03 PM
^^ Please STFU.^ You don't have any knowledge concerning what you're posting about. Please STFU, too.
1/9/2008 12:36:03 AM
1/9/2008 1:23:29 AM
1/9/2008 1:41:24 AM
^ WTF?
1/9/2008 1:52:40 AM
I think my point is obvious.I'm not even arguing about the recession stuff, just that quoting an org's opinion of itself isn't good policy [Edited on January 9, 2008 at 2:07 AM. Reason : .]
1/9/2008 1:58:15 AM
^ Um. . .not really. The point of me posting the link to the NBER Web site was simply to show that it's not a government entity. Whether the NBER actually fulfills it's mission is a separate matter.One problem I do have with the NBER is that it doesn't define a recession in the traditional manner: two or more quarters of flat or negative growth in the GDP. Until I see such a downturn in the GDP numbers, there is no recession to me as it relates to the generally accepted definition of the word. [Edited on January 9, 2008 at 2:17 AM. Reason : .]
1/9/2008 2:10:28 AM
I'd be surprised if they didn't get government money. Most nonprofits have to be funded somehow.[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 2:13 AM. Reason : but i'm getting yall off topic, continue the recession argument. Im interested to see what ppl think]
1/9/2008 2:12:36 AM
^ Receiving "government money" =/= Government entity
1/9/2008 2:19:48 AM
Here's another one from a large entity which is predicting a recession.http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22570624/
1/9/2008 8:35:20 AM
1/9/2008 8:38:52 AM
I don't think there's anything we could say to convince hooksaw that our economy is not impressive, which I agree with about 65%. It is very impressive the way it works. Some of us, however, hold it to a higher standard. My standard, considering the trend over the past 30 years or so, would be to expect 1 recession every 8-10 years. Recently, we've had 2 in 7 years... clearly underperforming by my standards. It's a difference of opinion and clearly hooksaw has lower expectations of our economy judging by his evaluation of its performance.Also, that unemployment graph someone posted above almost perfectly illustrates that Republican presidents have higher unemployment. There isn't an exception after 1960.
1/9/2008 9:02:27 AM
1/9/2008 9:13:42 AM
^ A clear example of rejecting reality and substituting their own.
1/9/2008 9:27:34 AM
seriously what the fuck
1/9/2008 12:06:36 PM
1/9/2008 12:37:07 PM
1/9/2008 1:19:02 PM