sábado, 6 de febrero de 2021

Newsvine - monetary-policy

The Worst is Yet to Come

Source: Forbes

What is more likely happening is a repeat of the Great Depression. We might have up to a year or so of an economy growing just slightly above stagnation, followed by a drop in growth worse than anything we have seen in the past two years.

Taxes, Depression, and Our Current Troubles

Source: Wall Street Journal

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has reiterated his goal not to repeat the mistakes made back in the 1930s by tightening credit too soon, which he says would send the economy back into recession.

The Joy of Sachs

Source: The New York Times

The American economy remains in dire straits, with one worker in six unemployed or underemployed. Yet Goldman Sachs just reported record quarterly profits — and it's preparing to hand out huge bonuses, comparable to what it was paying before the crisis.

The Fed must reassure markets on inflation

Source: FT.com

". . .In short, higher long-term interest rates reflect investors' concern about future inflation, future fiscal deficits and the future willingness of foreign investors to purchase US bonds.

Ron Paul, Teacher

Source: LewRockwell.com

WOW! This was a great discussion by Ron Paul with questions from high school students. He spoke about the Constitution, economics, his life and childhood, government, and foreign policy.

Money never gets adventurous although market participants quite take the steps to: HOW? They tap (into the system) global sources of money.

Printing Money is the logical way forward

Source: FT.com

This week the UK will begin printing money to help stave off a full-blown deflationary recession. At first sight such an event is likely to induce extreme palpitations in the heart of ardent Thatcherites.

While a plethora of economists semi-blindly examines the current deflationary macro-economic trend, reality speaks to the fact that a massive wave of inflation is here. Before anybody calls me crazy...

Obama Puts the Economic Cart Before the Horse by Peter Schiff

Source: LewRockwell.com

In his first televised speech before Congress, President Obama asserted that prosperity will return once the government restores the flow of credit in the economy. It may come as a surprise to him, but an economy cannot run on consumer loans.

Jaguair

Source: mises.org

"[T]ired of hearing economists argue that government and the Fed should expand credit for the good of the economy, Robert R. Prechter, Jr. [uses] an analogy [to] clarif[y the] subject....

Bernanke's speech shows where BOJ failed

Source: yomiuri.co.jp

The Bank of Japan has for almost 20 years insisted that it did not have the tools to end the banking-bust depression, could not help the deflation, was basically powerless, and that it depended on some structural reform that was supposed to be implemented by others--the governmen …

Avoiding a Liquidity Trap

Source: NewsMax

Zero interest rates, while sounding great, invariably carry very dangerous, unintended consequences, one of which is a condition known as a liquidity trap.

Fed readies for balance sheet tool as rate nears zero

Source: Business Standard

The Federal Reserve may reduce its main interest rate to the lowest level on record and prepare for one of the boldest experiments in its 94-year history on Tuesday: using its balance sheet as the key tool for monetary policy. The Fed's Open Market Committee will probably cu …

European Crass Warfare

Source: The New York Times

No, I'm not talking about Bob Corker, the Senator from Nissan — I mean Tennessee — and his fellow Republicans, who torpedoed last week's attempt to buy some time for the U.S. auto industry.

Bailout Bonanza

Source:

Peter Schiff was right all along, and they laughed him off of every business news program in the country. Who's laughing now? Well, nobody. Anyways, read this guy. He saw this coming years ago. To the letter.

Economic View - The New Deal Didn't Always Work, Either - NYTimes.com

Source: The New York Times

"A study of the 1930s by Christina D. Romer, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley ("What Ended the Great Depression?," Journal of Economic History, 1992), confirmed that expansionary monetary policy was the key to the partial recovery of the 1930s.

The Global Grand Bargain

Source: Foreign Policy Magazine

For U.S. President-elect Barack Obama, there is only one way to address the many problems that await him: Go large.