koalabear
~Armed and Fuzzy~
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2001
- Posts
- 101,964
Did you ever think Obama was going to be this bad?
I live near Chicago, yes.
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Did you ever think Obama was going to be this bad?
What exactly did the stimulus, stimulate? Hint, it wasnt consumer spending....
“The news today from CBO is clear: The president’s budget will continue to lead our nation into a fiscal catastrophe -- an ever worse one than the president’s own numbers suggest,”
hmmmm...
Baer also said, “What is certain is that the irresponsibility of the past put the country on an unsustainable fiscal trajectory.”
hmmm... revisited and re-stressed...
Baer also said, “What is certain is that the irresponsibility of the past put the country on an unsustainable fiscal trajectory.”
You realize you're quoting Obama's spokesman here, right? "Blame Bush."
Or maybe he means Pelosi and Reid's congress for the past three years?
You realize you're quoting Obama's spokesman here, right? "Blame Bush."
Or maybe he means Pelosi and Reid's congress for the past three years?
Obama's spokesman? Can't be! He just dissed Obama big time in this report! Plus, I thought the CBO was a nonpartisan agency! Why it even says so right there in the second paragraph of this linked article we're all currently trying to contextually exploit for our eternally useless Liberal Vs. Conservative/Democrat Vs. Republican blame-game-swagger-jacking-last-person-to-post-gets-the-win snowball fight!
Obama's spokesman? Can't be! He just dissed Obama big time in this report! Plus, I thought the CBO was a nonpartisan agency! Why it even says so right there in the second paragraph of this linked article we're all currently trying to contextually exploit for our eternally useless Liberal Vs. Conservative/Democrat Vs. Republican blame-game-swagger-jacking-last-person-to-post-gets-the-win snowball fight!
I see some more banks failed...
I see Obama's budget booming out of control.
I see Obama demanding even larger deficits and I see Greece burning.
I thank the Democrat Party for proving my pre-election predictions on the transparency, ethicality, and fiscal responsibly that accompanies Progressive (Marxist, Socialist, Democratic-Socialist, and Altruistic busybodies) Democrat governance. I also like the way they assume responsibility if they think things are going good and devolve themselves of blame when their secretive, corrupt, and irresponsible spending blows up in their face.
The only real question is, are they really happy-go-lucky boobs who just mean well but don't quite fully understand economics or are they actually sinking us on purpose to level the playing field both internationally and domestically?
At any rate, it looks like we may be headed into a double-dip recession and another lost decade similar to the Progressive '30s of the last century.
Just keep hoping against hope for economic failure Cap'n.
Meanwhile, in the Real World™..
Consumer credit rises for first time in a year.
Nasdaq at 18-month high.
Your paycheck is getting bigger. No joke.
An economic snow job.
Oh, and those "even larger deficits" you seem to be concerned with are because the administration includes extending the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts and proposals to protect middle and upper-middle income families from being impacted by the AMT.
B-b-b-b-but... Democrats only increase taxes, right?![]()
The recession is over, we get that. The economy is growing at 6%, but nobody is hiring! Why is that?
Oh, and those "even larger deficits" you seem to be concerned with are because the administration includes extending the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts and proposals to protect middle and upper-middle income families from being impacted by the AMT.
B-b-b-b-but... Democrats only increase taxes, right?![]()
B-b-b-b-but... Democrats only increase taxes, right?![]()
But wait! Didn't the conservitards here SWEAR that Obama was going to RAISE taxes on everyone?![]()
The recession is over, we get that. The economy is growing at 6%, but nobody is hiring! Why is that?
I see you're still having problems recognizing that job creation is a lagging indicator of economic health.
And under FDR and Japan's Keynesian policies, it lagged for ten fucking years...
12/26/09 7:29 AM
American Thinker- Print Article
Page 1 of 3
http://www.americanthinker.com/prin...nker.com/2009/12/the_iron_law_of_bubbles.html
Return to the Article
December 26, 2009
The iron law of bubbles
By Henry Oliner
In A Short History of Financial Euphoria, (1993) J. K. Galbraith takes a brief look at
financial bubbles and draws conclusion about their similarity. The most remarkable of the
early manias was not in stock, but in tulip bulbs. The value of mere tulips bulbs grew to
the modern equivalents of $25,000 to as much as $50,000 in today's value during the Tulip
Mania that swept the Netherlands in the 1630s.
Ninety years later in 1720, The Mississippi Company that was formed by John Law to
speculate on the as yet undiscovered gold resources in the New World collapsed. The
revenues from the discovery of gold were supposed to support notes issued by the Banque
Royale to pay off French government debt, but the stock proceeds ended up going directly
to debt reduction. During this same time period the British created a similar joint stock
enterprise called the South Sea Company to also seek wealth from trade routes to retire
British government debt. Also in 1720 it met the same fate as the other manias.
All of these bubbles came to a ruinous end. Promoters that were hailed as geniuses
became villains. Economies were set back years and confidence in financial institutions
was damaged for decades.
The American adventure had numerous bubbles culminating in the stock crash of 1929.
The crash of 1987, the dotcom bubble of the 1990, and the current mortgage fiasco seem
to beg the question, "In spite of the lessons of history, and the superiority of modern
regulatory agencies (the Fed, FDIC, SEC, etc) why do we keep committing the same
disasters?" (I distinguish bubbles, which are real markets bid up excessively by irrational
demand, from frauds such as Vesco and Bernie Maddoff.)
Galbraith notes some similarities. In the aftermath the government tends to fault the
instruments of speculations rather than the individual psychology. While new laws are
passed to avert the last bubble, the human psychological need to speculate simply seeks a
different avenue to quench its thirst.
12/26/09 7:29 AM
American Thinker- Print Article
Page 2 of 3
http://www.americanthinker.com/prin...nker.com/2009/12/the_iron_law_of_bubbles.html
Almost all of the financial bubbles involved excessive debt to one degree or another.
People forget that debt is a doubled edge sword and the very leverage that led to rapid
growth leads to even steeper declines.
But the most striking common attribute that is the human element. In almost every case
there is this infatuation with wealth as a sign of intelligence. Galbraith noted there is "the
impression that intelligence, one's own and that of others, marches in close step with the
possession of money."
"No one wishes to believe that this is fortuitous or undeserved; all wish to think that it is
the result of their own superior insight or intuition. The very increase in values thus
captured the thoughts and minds of those being rewarded. Speculation buys up in a very
practical way the intelligence of the involved."
Long Term Capital was a major fiasco in the late 1990's. With two Nobel prize winning
economists on the board, the hedge fund made bets on small moves that were heavily
leveraged yielding remarkable gains.... for a while. But when excessive debt meets
excessive intelligence, the inevitable consequences of debt will eventually rule.
Our culture is enamored with talent, but the physical skills of an athlete that are clear and
measureable, do not transfer to the boardroom or the trading floor. There is too much
uncertainty and randomness to either credit or blame talent alone for the result.
As Nassim Taleb noted and named his book, we are Fooled by Randomness. We do not
pay an executive millions of dollars because he has talent; we assume he has talent
because he makes millions of dollars.
But this same infatuation with talent can be attached to more than money; it can be
attached to power. With capitalism struggling to recover from yet another smackdown
bubble we seem inclined to somehow believe that academics in political power will yield
better results. The same uncertainty that plagues the financial markets also plagues the
political environment. The biggest difference is that a financial bubble will be brought
down much more quickly. Bad political solutions become institutionalized and linger for
decades. In many ways the current financial mess was born from political solutions
imposed in response to our previous bubbles.
The market doesn't analyze and hold hearings. It is swift and brutal. In fact the financial
bubbles are the result of the public facing the reality of their previous foolishness and
going cold turkey. The best solution is to let the bubble play out and to clear the rubble.
Our inability to withstand short-term pain tends to lead to longer term, often far more
severe pain. It is as foolish to associate political power with intelligence, as it was foolish
to associate mere wealth with intelligence. I would rather have a growing economy with
12/26/09 7:29 AM
American Thinker- Print Article
Page 3 of 3
http://www.americanthinker.com/prin...nker.com/2009/12/the_iron_law_of_bubbles.html
occasional bubbles than government policies seeking to remove all our financial pain and
slowing our economic engine to a crawl. Many of the more recent examples of bubbles
such as the savings and loan bubble in the late 1980's and the current real estate and
mortgage market bubble were largely fed by a combination of political goals and a
politically accommodating fed. Oversight agencies were often restrained from their duty by
political pressure and lobbyists.
Our political discourse is largely about the balance between the need to smartly regulate a
very efficient but imperfect market, and the desire to merely replace financial power with
political power. It often means the balance between individual rights and the interests of
the collective. While the economic self-interest of capitalism is suspect after the bubble is
burst, we often suffer more from the political self-interest that seeks to correct it. Our
most oppressive laws are often the ones designed to protect us from our own stupidity.
Galbraith said that our collective financial memory seems to be about 20 years. By that
time we forget the lessons of the past and repeat them. That period seems more recently to
be closer to eight years. But while our memory may be short these financial bubbles do
burst and we do recover.
Political bubbles, however, are made of iron, and they are much more difficult to deflate.
Henry Oliner blogs at rebelyid.com.
Page Printed from:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/12/the_iron_law_of_bubbles.html at December
26, 2009 - 08:28:54 AM EST
Now do FDR...
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