This seems to have been lost among all the post election rabble, but the Fed made a big (but expected) announcement:
11/4/2010 5:29:55 PM
I really wish the media would point out that it is "money printing" every time they mention QE.Not that your average Joe will necessarily know what the effects of money printing are, but I think he could grasp that something isn't kosher with the idea of it where-as if you ask him what the effects of QE are, he is going to think you're talking physics.
11/4/2010 5:38:37 PM
Brazil and Thailand are pissed because they already devalued their currencies and our actions are simply undermining their attempt to gain an export advantage. Same with the Chinese who will now have to pump out even more $$$ to maintain the peg against the dollar. One could say that this action helps level the playing field against nations who have intentionally manipulated their currencies to gain an advantage.Germans are pissed because this will probably hurt their exports.Honestly, I don't have too many complaints about this move. One commentator made the point that if anything, we are more at a threat of deflationary pressures that would be a death spiral during a recession, and thus it's reasonable to risk minor inflation in an attempt to help jump start our economy.
11/4/2010 5:40:31 PM
You've got to be shitting me?
11/4/2010 5:56:57 PM
11/4/2010 6:07:12 PM
11/4/2010 7:24:22 PM
what creditor in his right mind would want to lend when the threat of massive inflation looms ready to destroy the value of the money he might lend out?also, wouldn't it also increase the availability of credit if the gov't stopped borrowing so much money to pay for ever more government programs?]
11/4/2010 7:38:40 PM
11/4/2010 7:45:36 PM
Banks have a trillion in cash to lend and the smaller community banks are in fact lending. There is no credit problem at the moment.Ben is doing what Ben does, fearing a deflationary trap he is printing money hoping to buy time so that we can somehow earn enough to cover the debt and avoid the trap.It likely won't work.
11/4/2010 7:46:05 PM
11/4/2010 7:49:31 PM
11/4/2010 7:50:10 PM
I think the theory is that if investors make money, they invests in businesses, who then hopefully will find things to hire people for.It’s up to businesses to retool away from an economy based on consumer spending. They’re not going to though, because they’re still the short-sighted greedy assholes they were before the collapse.When people are flipping out because of unemployment, you should expect the gov. to do things that can help. The solution that you have to let things break before you can fix it doesn’t sit well with the public, i’m sorry to say.And it’s funny that you’re lamenting minor inflation in this thread when your hero Peter Schiff was waling about spiraling inflation until recently, because of all this money-printing. Not to mention the well established principle that inflation helps keep the labor markets flowing. At this point in time, that is a bigger concern than slightly higher goods.[Edited on November 4, 2010 at 7:58 PM. Reason : ]
11/4/2010 7:56:28 PM
11/4/2010 8:13:10 PM
11/4/2010 8:15:28 PM
11/4/2010 8:33:58 PM
11/4/2010 10:41:09 PM
You have to break some eggs to make an omelet...That's why we need to bolster vocational and college education. Those people are valuable with just a tad bit more training.There's enough money floating around that high school students who do well can have their college paid for. Georgia does this, and it works well for them.[Edited on November 4, 2010 at 10:48 PM. Reason : ]
11/4/2010 10:48:14 PM
11/4/2010 11:17:52 PM
Well, this is what the fed is for, printing money. Unless it loses the money, every dollar it creates will get sucked back up eventually, so I have no complaints here. I just hope Congress does not fall victim to the Greek disease of thinking borrowing is no problem just because treasury rates are low.
11/5/2010 2:03:30 AM
11/5/2010 6:43:10 AM
He was doing so well up until about 9 minuteshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2t5YSl44dU&feature=player_embedded#!
11/5/2010 7:03:52 AM
11/5/2010 9:00:43 AM
d357r0y3r: where's the hyperinflation you've been promising us for months. And months. And months. Most of the stimulus has been spent, the discount rate is at 0%, and we're still stuck below 2% inflation.
11/5/2010 9:28:09 AM
In before, "you'll see" or "you'll be sorry".
11/5/2010 9:47:12 AM
^^ I suspect all the quantitative easing was eaten up by the stimulus. The money multiplier of additional government spending so far seems to have been very negative.
11/5/2010 10:41:49 AM
11/5/2010 11:33:39 AM
we're fucked.
11/5/2010 11:43:46 AM
11/5/2010 6:05:07 PM
So basically you've become the argument Nazi and you can't read an entire argument and get the point, you must deconstruct every little statement of it?Anyone with a brain can see what he meant to say was hyperinflation gets triggered by a loss of faith, not that the inflation is high and someone suddenly decides, hey, we are now having hyperinflation, not just very high inflation.
11/5/2010 6:24:43 PM
11/5/2010 8:57:52 PM
11/5/2010 9:35:22 PM
11/6/2010 1:26:14 AM
11/6/2010 1:46:15 AM
11/6/2010 9:00:36 AM
11/6/2010 11:11:14 AM
Sorry, when you said no inflation I automatically thought deflation. If there is no inflation, remind me again why their pay would be cut?
11/6/2010 11:37:54 AM
11/6/2010 12:22:30 PM
11/6/2010 12:39:02 PM
11/6/2010 12:48:22 PM
Chance, you and I have a radically different view of economic activity. First mistake: employers do not give employees raises just because the employees ask for them, or want them. Employers hiring employees are just like shoppers in a store, they pay what they must to get what they want. As such, wages absent regulation only go up when workers find work elsewhere and start quitting, leaving job openings to go unfilled. This is so regardless of profitability. Unprofitable companies must offer competitive wages just as much as profitable companies do. Only when labor unions are involved does "ability to pay" matter to the equation.
11/6/2010 2:48:52 PM
11/6/2010 4:25:31 PM
I guess it was in response to this statement:
11/6/2010 7:28:04 PM
11/8/2010 11:11:06 AM
11/8/2010 11:16:22 AM
11/8/2010 6:27:55 PM
Weird, with all the supply of money Ben has been pumping, you'd think it would have created it's own demand by now. The only thing that is being demanded is commodities as emerging markets are exchanging their dollars as quick as they can.[Edited on November 8, 2010 at 7:28 PM. Reason : a]
11/8/2010 7:18:29 PM
I don't feel like posting the link from my phone, but it's all over the news. It's official: of the 3.3 trillion Fed bailout, quite a bit went to private companies and foreign banks. Really, it should come as no surprise. These are interesting times we live in, where the line between banking, government, and business is wiped away completely. Meanwhile, the population at large continues on, buying more on credit, oblivious to the corruption that is rampant and totally unchecked.
12/2/2010 1:19:08 PM
as long as crude doesn't shoot up to $150/barrel in a short amount of time, the devaluation of our currency will mean increased jobs in domestically. the lower GBP and Euro this year have already bolstered UK & German manufacturing and exports. as a matter of fact, China has already started buying USD so that it doesn't drop too fast.there are two main threats to crude spiking. 1- the next OPEC president is said to be Iranian, and 2- that of potential instability in the world oil transit chokepoints such as the Straits of Hormuz:http://www.eia.doe.gov/cabs/world_oil_transit_chokepoints/images/Hormuz%20Small.gif
12/2/2010 2:44:28 PM
12/2/2010 2:50:39 PM
12/2/2010 5:28:11 PM