Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Fixing the Economy: Of Fences and Futures
A man calls a carpenter and says that his dog has been getting out. He instructs the carpenter to raise the fence in the back yard by a foot. The carpenter does the job.
The next day, the man calls the carpenter back and says that the dog is still getting out. He tells the carpenter to add another foot to the top of the fence. The carpenter does so.
On the third day, the man calls the carpenter back yet again and begins to tell him to add still another foot. But this time the carpenter interrupts him. Pointing to the far corner of the yard, he says, "Sir, I can raise the top of the fence to the sky, but until you fix that hole at the bottom, the dog is going to keep getting out."
So far, all the money aimed at fixing the economy has gone to the top of the fence - the banks - and not at the actual hole in the bottom - insufficient incomes. We can pour money into the banks until the government itself is bankrupt but until we fix the problem at the bottom, with vanishing jobs, declining incomes, and rising foreclosures, the crisis will only deepen.
Giving money to the banks hasn't worked and won't work for three reasons. First, they are insolvent. The financial crisis has destroyed almost $4 trillion in bank-system capital, against a little less than $2 trillion in equity. The banks are literally bankrupt with nothing to lend. Unless the government is willing to give the banks an additional $2 trillion of taxpayer money, they cannot be revived in their current form.
Second, the banks are leery of loaning to each other because they all know this. They all know of their own devastated balance sheets and of the "toxic sludge" that has brought them down. They know all too well that the same toxic sludge infects the balance sheets of all of the other banks. No one wants to lend to someone that is both bankrupt and holding nothing but bogus assets. Would you?
The final reason the top-of-the-fence strategy won't work is that banks know all too well the plight of consumers whose spending makes up over 70% of GDP. They can see better than anybody the collapse of consumer incomes, the overextension of credit card debt, the late payments on car loans, the decimated retirement accounts, the skyrocketing foreclosures, and the imploding home values. There has never been a worse time to lend money, so expecting it to happen from bankrupt banks to collapsing consumers is idiocy.
All of this is made still worse because the collapse is feeding on itself. Every time someone loses a job, the chance of foreclosure skyrockets. And every time a home's value is written down in foreclosure, the balance sheet of the bank that wrote the mortgage is undermined. The losses at the bottom are precisely what continue to erode the balance sheets at the top.
A "banks-first" strategy amounts to trying to fill a bucket with a hole in it by catching the water that's leaking out of the bottom and returning it to the top before it drains out again. You can't get ahead because to raise the level in the bucket, you need ever more water from the hole in the bottom. But more water from the bottom is exactly what lowers the level at the top. It's an exercise in futility, indeed, insanity.
The government needs to plug the hole in the bottom by declaring a moratorium on foreclosures until mortgage debts can be renegotiated, probably with government help - the same government help that would otherwise go to the banks. Only this will stop the drain on bank balance sheets.
But this can only be effective in the context of a revived employment market. The U.S. economy has lost almost 4 million jobs in the past year and the rate of loss is accelerating. In January, 600,000 jobs were lost, an annual rate of over 7 million. This is why the administration's stimulus program is so important.
It is the first attempt since the beginning of the crisis that begins to actually address the core of the problem: that consumers do not have enough income to keep the economy afloat. And there's nothing left they can borrow against to sustain the illusion of prosperity that has been the entirety of the economy's "growth" for the past eight years.
As important as restoring jobs and improving productivity are in the short run, they are even more critical in the long run. The U.S. needs to borrow in excess of $2 trillion this year and perhaps as much again next year. It is an astonishing, almost inconceivable sum, four times the amount the nation borrowed in its first 204 years combined. That is the plight the Republicans have left us with. It cannot be underestimated.
To borrow such sums, the U.S. needs to present a plausible story to its foreign creditors about how it will pay the money back. Until recently, the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency allowed the U.S. to simply print money for the things it wanted to buy. That is what has allowed us to run trade deficits and budget deficits in excess of a trillion a year, essentially borrowing that sum from foreigners on the promise to pay later.
But that era is over. It has become clear to all the world that the U.S. has lived far beyond its means and that it does not begin to earn the funds needed to sustain its lifestyle. After the near collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac last fall, foreigners have become leery of the "trust us" line that has become Uncle Sam's only story.
If the U.S. cannot show these foreign lenders - think China, Saudi Arabia, and Japan - how it will pay the money back, they will soon stop the lending, as any sensible creditor would. Why throw good money after bad? This was the clear message of Vladimir Putin and Chinese Premier Wen Jiaboa at the recent Davos conference in Switzerland.
If foreigners stop lending, the resulting collapse will make the recent crisis look like a child's game of Monopoly gone awry. Instead of a 5% fall in GDP, it will be closer to 15%. Instead of 7.6% unemployment, think 20%. Asset values, meaning home and stock prices, will plummet even further. Consumer spending will retrench dramatically in fear of still further erosions of wealth and income.
At some point, such a dynamic becomes impossible to reverse. To attract the money to run the government, the Treasury will have to raise interest rates on government bonds to stratospheric levels. This will kill off any possible recovery, consigning the U.S. economy to a self-reinforcing downward spiral of insufficient demand, inadequate investment, crumbling infrastructure, declining productivity, and competitive obsolescence.
Susan Sontag once wrote, "We need the courage to be serious." We need not only a short-term but also a long-term strategy that provides jobs and incomes so that we don't require ever greater doses of borrowed money to keep the lights on. As a nation, we need to begin producing things that other nations want to buy so that we can afford to buy the things they produce without having to write an endless stream of trillion dollar hot checks.
There isn't enough money in the treasury to raise the fence to the sky. Even if there were, it would be fruitless unless we fix the hole at the bottom. And we need to fix it quickly and persuasively while others will still loan us the money to do it. The decades-long sucker's game we've played on other nations and ourselves is over. It's time to grow up.
- Posted in


45 Comments so far
Show AllSpeaking of holes in the fence...
California, in anoher desperate bid to prop up it's fatally wounded economy, is planning to cut it's prsion population by 40%.
That should have the right wing law and order types completely freaking out, making the usual outlandish claims that they will be releasing rapists and murderers into the local communities.
If anything, those released will be the nickle and dime pot smokers who have been incarcerated under draconian anti-drug laws.
But they will all be unemployed, and unemployable. No reputable company would touch them with a pike. That will drive the jobless figure even higher, and be a further drain on an already collapsing social safety net.
Is it just me, or are the cures to this economic disease worse than the disease?
Walk in peace.
Galen 9:17 -------- There might be some potheads but I bet the vast majority are crack and meth heads; who need medical help and social support; which will not be sufficiently available. The truth is meth heads are some of the most insanely violent people on earth. Of course the poor and middle class will be the victims as usual.
No argument from me.
We are going through our own gangland bloodletting here in the Lower Mainland as we speak.
Walk in peace.
But the difference is the major competing suppliers are being assassinated. Try not to get caught in the cross fire.
No high level drug lords in this bloodbath. Just low level street thugs with guns (smuggled in from the US) and rap music fueled egos.
Walk in peace.
Having no experience with that area, I'll have to assume you're right. However, the U.S. incarcerates a full three percent of the population. Most for minor, non-violent crimes. That works out to what? Nine million people behind bars. It's the highest percentage in the world.
According to interviews on 20/20 I believe it was, DEA chopper pilots say we are losing the drug war, which is helping to bankrupt us. More pot farms are popping up all over the place tended by mexican nationals working for mexican gangs.
Didn't we learn anything from prohibition?
Namely, that it cannot work.
Just like keeping those crooks in the central (fed) bank earning free interest for having the monopoly of printing each and every US dollar. The interest before these bailouts was 450 billion due on the debt in 2009 if I remember correctly. Now what the hell's it going to be???????
Obama????????
Surrender the war on drugs. Close the Federal Reserve Bank Down. Pull out of all the wars we are engaged in right now; then divert those trillions into an FDR jobs program of solid solar panels in the southern states and we just might live to retirement!
Oh yeah, let the banks and GM go bankrupt. They're probably going to anyway; we are just delaying the inevitable, their cars are junk and their management is wrong school.
Since no one's going to buy a new car if they don't have to, what's next? Is the government going to buy them instead?
Nuts.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
yeah galen i heard that yesterday..it had to happen, and as usual cali leads the way..seems they (i have been gone for a long time) initiated the 3-strikes thing..back when the folks thought times were flush..time to declare the drug war over!!
ken
This is a good article based on "good sense." Washington too often doesn't use good sense.
Bailing out Wall Street and the banks reflects the influence these corporate donors have had on politicians. That is why our government is tending their needs first, the people's second.
One brief comment- it mentions that Republicans have brought us to our current economic situation. We need to remember that Democrats also brought us to this place. Clinton signed NAFTA, supported deregulation, wasteful military spending, and a host of other harmful economic and foreign policies.
Both Democrats and Republicans need to change their economic and foreign policies so that human and environmental needs are met first and that our economy is sustainable.
One suggestion: The Demo and Repub don't need to change; the public needs to replace the Demo's and Repub's with new parties with new programs.
Kind of amusing that someone finally put eloquently into words what all of us here at the bottom of the ladder have been talking about for a long time. We got no money.
But what's the underlying cause of the underlying causes? Science fiction writers have been writing about it for years. Too many machines doing more and more work that takes away from human work. We now have maybe 1 billion people doing the work of building and growing. The rest are shuffling paper around in a gargantuan ponzi scheme that gives us televisions, video games, etc. etc. Now we've borrowed from each other till no one has anything left to lend and we can't buy the toys and the companies are going down and jobs are being lost contributing to fewer toys and fewer companies etc etc.
Perception is changing. Soon everyone will realize that capitalism has run out of control and killed us all.
>>>glb wrote: Too many machines doing more and more work that takes away from human work. We now have maybe 1 billion people doing the work of building and growing. The rest are shuffling paper around in a gargantuan ponzi scheme that gives us televisions, video games, etc. etc.
Ever noticed on TV whenever they talk about the auto industry's problems, you see the assembly line moving, and sometimes there are no humans in that picture - only robots doing the welding, and the line keeps moving. This might have been ok 100 years ago - but to produce stuff at this rate today? And this is not an assembly line producing cookies - these are cars that people buy and plan to use for several years - so why this mad pace of production? We are using up the earth's resources that is absolutely unsustainable. It's the inevitable fallout of the current capitalist model - a small percentage of the population controls the capital and the resources, and the rest are left scrambling to find something to do to make a living.
(Before anyone talks about population, I want to point out that there is a vast difference in the per capita consumption levels, and besides, you wouldn't want to start with yourself in the population reduction, would you?)
Highintel: Can we do better?
The only approach the GOP knows to stimulate the economy is to give more money to the rich and let it "trickle down". I call this the piss-on-you theory. As has been shown already as a result of TARP funds distributed, big business is not going to use government money to stimulate the economy. They're going to use it to stimulate the linings of their pockets.
Here's an example. Interest rates are at all an all time low. The government has provided most of our largest banks with money and encouraged them to loan it out to Joe Six Pack consumers. Sounds good. But here's what is happening in reality..... I (Joe Six Pack) have had a credit card with Capital One for over 15 years. I've never had a late payment, over limit, or any other problem with my account (or with any other creditor for that matter). My credit score is in the "very good" to "excellent" range. I received a letter yesterday from Capital One saying that they are raising the interest rate on my credit card from 6% to 16%. No explanation. How's that for economic stimulus? I'm not an economist, but it seems to me that a good way NOT to stimulate the economy is to piss off your best, loyal, credit worthy, profitable customers.
To add insult to injury, when I called Capital One to complain, my call went to a call center in India. Now I have nothing whatsoever against the Indian people. India a is valued friend of the United States. But at the same time our banks are cutting their throats by driving good customers like me away, they are also laying off employees here in the US and hiring employees in India. So, the corporate response to the economic mess is to INCREASE UNEMPLOYMENT and DISCOURAGE SPENDING. No wonder their CEO's get paid so much. They are frickin' brilliant!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
If anyone asks what's in my wallet, my answer will be NOT a Capital One card. If everyone who has a Capital One card would call them and tell them to stick their credit card up their corporate ass, then do you suppose that would send a message?
Dmia - with your history of no late payments, under the limit and paid off, you are EXACTLY the type of credit card holder the credit companies refer to as 'a deadbeat'.
You don't make them their bloated profits from charging interest on your overdue, overextended account. Your dilligence at trying to live within your means was COSTING them profits.
So the sudden jump in interest rates was nothing more than a last ditch attempt to strip you of your savings.
Hope that clears some of the fog from your questioning...
Walk in peace.
Everyone is bankrupt or headed that way because the Fed is the hole at the bottom from the top.
Robert Freeman acknowledges our unimaginable debt... and more unimaginable debt and inflation is gonna be the side effect of the on going cure. The Fed only creates more money from the promise of more debt.
That is the Real big Hole at the bottom from the top. In fact nothing well reach the bottom but inflation with the FED in control. After 100 years the Debt is over the top, bottom and middle. It is a freaking flood!
To use the analogy of a hole in the fence,here's my long range answer to the problems of the US economy.
Every effort needs to be made to bring back ALL jobs to the US that have been "outsourced".The first companies to do this will get prominent mention on all MSM-perhaps 5 minutes of free airtime would suffice.Such "rescue America" efforts could set off a race of competitors to do likewise.Entire industries could be brought back-especially the textile and clothing industries,appliances etc.Globalization is just the kleptocracy's word for treason.Yes,treason,a nation's economy is one of the areas the government needs to protect.
I've posted this anecdote in the past,I think it bears repeating.About 20 years ago,CBS's 60 Minutes had a hidden camera piece of a cocktail party of a bunch of CEOs and a few government emloyees.They caught an employee of USAID buttonholing a group of CEOs who were discussing how cheap the foreign labor would be for the US jobs they were pulling out from under their workers.This piece of human detritus couldn't temper his enthusiasm that he could help them get labor in a different country for a few cents an hour cheaper.The rates were somewhere between 35 and 40 cents/hr.So here we had a government employee helping to screw US workers.
The 8 years of "Wanker" rule have put us in a situation that won't be rectified for generations,unless dramatic measures like the one I propose are undertaken.
Sioux Rose
KLEVER: Your "rescue America" = free media recognition "campaign" sounds excellent, but I'll bet the companies that would consider this will try to bust unions and get American workers to be happy to work for minimum wage (or less). In a very real way our nation's people are now officially competing with their 3rd world counterparts. What I see ensuing over the course of the next 15-20 years is a worldwide revolution on the part of unified labor. Trends have gone global, with the exception of South America. Having been on the receiving end of the neoliberal policies forced upon them by the World Bank and seen the poor get poorer, and more wealth accrue to a very small elite percentage, they now recognize the importance of spreading decency around. No society can pay for the various policing forces required to hold back the masses when those masses get stomped upon every which way, a lesson that seems to be hitting home, its velocity not yet up to maximum speed, however.
The US must nationalize its retail banking industry. This will convince our foreign creditors that the government will support the currency and indicates our government intends to pay its debts to value. The US must nationalize its residential mortgage banking industry. This will protect homeowners and eliminate the game of selling mortgage packages for the purpose clipping points from the sale – until the mortgages in the packages have no more points to clip.
The US must double its taxation on investment income estimated at incomes over $100K for inhdividuals and $180K for families, both to provide itself with revenue to service its debt, and to steer investment income towards fruitful investment. The US must then offer deductions in specific areas of investment focused on rebuilding infrastructure for the next decade or so. To do this, it needs to appoint a coordinating agency to be affiliated with the GAO providing Congress with an annual schedule of needed investment deductions to indicate the good faith of Congress with respect to the stiffer tax rates imposed upon the wealthy.
Do it now. There is no choice.
ClassAct, your suggested taxation model is absolutely reasonable. The question is, is anyone listening. Also, those who are used to easy-money are not going to let change happen that easily. There will be all kinds of spin in the media if anyone even attempts to revise the tax system.
Highintel: Can we do better?
Sioux Rose
CLASS ACT: Have you shared these stragies in a "letter to the editor" of a big circulation newspaper, or sent them to your congress person? They sure sound wise and solid to me. I wish they would get enacted!
We are on a roll here. Nationalized the private banking system, nationalize residential Mortgage banking like Fannie and Freddie, nationalize healthcare, and nationalize .... what's left? "The United Socialist States of America." More power to the Washington Bureaucrats, they have a proven track record right?? Big Brother just can't wait to protect us from the point clippers and to help us steer our investments towards fruitful ones. Utopia...finally! Big Government we love you!
Just how did we get in this mess in the first place? Whose actions might have been responsible for the mess we're in?
We go this road there is no turning back, this once great nation that was as
"Lincoln" put it " A government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth." We can change that to "a government of the bureaucrat, by the bureaucrat.....etc. to rob us blind, while they live lives "of royalty" above the law. They have brought our "Republic" to the brink of bankruptcy. Who was directly responsible for the undermining of our "INDUSTRIAL ECONOMIC BASE". Global economics did not present a level playing field for the American middle class worker. Due to our middle class stature we would find it hard to work for $5.00 per day to compete for our job on a global scale. Wasn't it the Washington eletist bureaucrats who jumped on this uneven global rollercoaster under the false pretense of "free trade". No one stepped forward in defense of the American working stiff. Both side of the isle contributed to enacting these unfair trade agreements. The result was a massive manufacturing exudus to China and everywhere else, leaving millions jobless with most American industries unable to compete. In all fairness to the American worker it never should have gone down this road without him/her kicking and screaming "how am I going to make a living?." You really trust Big Brother to make all this right as you have described? Do you think Gen. Washington should have surrendered before or after he crossed the Delaware? He had no choice?
What the hell are you talking about? You're certainly on a roll relating one thing to another, but fail to show or even offer any cause and effect between them. Socialism is a prerequisite for democracy – it does not guarantee democracy, but the absence of socialism certainly guarantees the absence of democracy.
Probably, the best thing to do first is remove from office the Obama administration. Many of us knew he is a shill, but his appointments and solutions are equal to running in the streets telling us that the "space aliens" will bail us out.
Mr. Obama is a wacko, pure and simple. He should be removed from office with all of his looser appointments.
Look at the facts:
Stock market down 300 points after Geithner's speech.
Administration Officials Met With Laughter At Bailout Briefing
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/02/10/administration-officials_n_165551.html
Banks Rescue Will 'Make Things Worse': Rogers
http://www.cnbc.com/id/29114947
How much more do you need? A worthless currency may be the final, final.
He wins an overwhelming victory in the face of massive Republican election fraud. And you call him a wacko.
Far out.
Look at his appointments, you think that is a sane man. He has appointed Bush Republicans and Clinton retreads who got the world into the economic mess we find ourselves.
Yeah, Mr. Obama is a wack-a-doodle. Or more appropriately, a corporate shill.
AlQueda's second in demand stated their objectives:
Weaken the US militarily. Check
Weaken the US financially. Check
Break the US up into smaller states, possibly divied up and ruled by foreign powers....
Looks like a cakewalk.
The terrorists have won.
The author of this article uses the analogy of a guy who keeps hiring a carpenter to raise a fence so his dog can't get out, despite the fact that the dog keeps escaping through the hole, unbeknown to the man.
Continuing the same analogy let's call the guy, an honest taxpayer, and the carpenter spending his money on defense, namely da fence, we'll call the pentagon. But the pentagon carpenter likes the job so he doesn't point out the hole the dog keeps getting through. Da fence keeps getting higher and more and more elaborate, slowly bankrupting the poor guy.
And the dog? we'll call that the dog of war.
Sioux Rose
REBEL NOW: Wonderful post, and apt response! I am so over THAT dog! As no doubt are those on the receiving end of its lethal bites.
When did radical right-wing conservative extremists become "centrists"?
When Geithner said "we are exploring a range of different structures" he was essentially admitting that he still doesn't have a clue how to do this.
That's Wall Street's take. But it's superficial.
What is more likely to be true is that Geithner does know how to do this, but also knows that the valid corrective actions are politically impossible to enact.
The lone fact that the political will does not exist to properly address the root causes of the crisis virtually guarantees that the US is in for a long and deep depression.
Even the House version of the 'stimulus package' is so weak and so badly targeted that it would quite fail to have the intended effects even if it could be passed. Worse, it will prevent the possibility of any future bill which could succeed, because the resources necessary for yet another do-over do not exist. There can be no more chances to 'get it right'.
There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide.
As soon as Giethner started yapping, the DOW fell off a cliff. It's down 384 points, with no bottom in sight. ANd the whole Obama team is now hedging their economic bets, saying there is a '30% change nothing will work' (Biden), to 'There is no magic bullet' (Giethner), to 'It could take a year before we see the first effects of the stimulus' (Obama).
In other words, they were breifed by the outgoing Bushco Boys on how bad it is going to get, and now Obama's (Too Smart) Crew get to be the public face/fall guys for the Wall Street titans (including Giethner) who engineered this whole mess in the first place.
Walk in peace.
No more money to big banks. Nationalize them.
This may sound simplistic but the government needs to print more money that can go in to circulation right away.
Yeah. Thats exactly what the German Wiemar Republic did.
And we know how well that worked out... 100 000 Duetchmark for a loaf of bread, and the argument used by a certain A. Hitler for a draconian expansion of government power. One vicious world war later, with millions of deaths on all sides and here we are...
Right back where we started, with another 'Made In America' global depression staring us in the teeth. Except this time, a world war will likely involve major cites going 'Hiroshima'...
Is that really the direction you want to go? The US military is already seeing a jump in enlistments due to layoffs. Ever hear of the 'poverty draft'?
Walk in peace.
Costs are not going down-but keep going steadily up. A good idea would be to create jobs and increase the wages of the workers.
People are unwilling to be the debt slaves of the global economy.
Credit did not work the first time and will never work again.
What good is a credit card if you cannot have easy, affordable credit? I am sure the small banks can jump in but they are not allowed. The monopolies want to buy them up so all are forced to accept usury terms.
George Monbiot (the Climate Change commentator) has a an idea he is presenting, but is claiming no credit for.
Locally issued short term currencies.
The idea is a community, business or individual pays workers in scrip that only lasts a predetermined time, thus encouraging an increase in work/jobs and personal expendature. At the end of the period, the 'money' is worthless, so it MUST be spent in order to accrue the benefits. Thus stimulating the local and eventually wider economies.
The downside is that every time this process is tried, national governments step in and forcibly end the process, with predictable immediate massive unemployment and poverty.
Could this be an idea whose time has come... again?
Walk in peace.
I totally agree, the problem is that the wages didn't go up for the past 20 years, you still have to apply for a $15/hour job on average when it should be $40/hour. I know it could create a drop of dividend for share holders but hey, thing can't always bring in 20% return.
I think that this article is a bit alarmist I must say.
Aldoinsf
Funny you should mention guaranteed returns... ever hear of a guy called Bernie Madoff?
Walk in peace.
What if there is no answer!
What if neither the Public Sector nor the Private Sector nor the combination thereof can solve the problem of the Economy in any conventional sense?
What if the downward spiral just keeps spiraling down, while the Obama/Congress package seeks to "reflate" an economy that never should have done what it did?
As a society and a culture what do we do then? We maybe ought to start thinking about planning ahead because it looks like the proverbial ducks in the turbine.
-30-
What will we do with the ashes of the Phoenix? That is up to us. It means turning our attention away from blame, and toward genuine understanding and compassion. We must work on ourselves to bring 'positive' and 'meaningful' change; otherwise, the wave of self-destruction will only accelerate. Mankind may indeed be at a make or break crossroad.
THE US ECONOMY IS SINKING LIKE THE TITANIC
http://financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/schoon/2009/0128.html
What has happened to America, the destruction of what was recently the most powerful economy in the world could not have happened without the complicity of politicians of both parties who aided the bankers in their parasitic plundering of America’s wealth, productivity and future.
The Republicans were the primary tool—and natural home—of the bankers but the bankers could not have achieved their enormous power and influence over America’s domestic and foreign policy without the complicity of Democrats along the way.
It was Democrat Woodrow Wilson, who signed into law the Federal Reserve Act in 1913 that gave private bankers control over US currency, control that was to indebt our nation, businesses and people into perpetual indebtedness.
It was Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt who outlawed the possession of gold in 1933 by US citizens thereby trapping Americans into the paper assets of bankers just as the bankers wished, putting beyond Americans’ reach the gold that would have otherwise protected them from the banker’s debasement of the US dollar.
And it was Democrat Bill Clinton who signed the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999, thereby repealing the safeguards set up in 1933 to prevent another Great Depression and allowed investment banks, insurance companies and commercial banks to co-mingle America’s savings in what was to be soon the greatest destruction of wealth on a scale never before seen.
AND, NOW, ANOTHER DEMOCRAT IS IN THE WHITE HOUSE
We now have a another Democrat in the White House who has the dubious honor of inheriting a nation in tatters, its reputation and economy virtually destroyed by its previous occupant who allowed the nation to sink to previously unimaginable lows in both fiscal irresponsibility and illegal acts.
I guess that’s to be expected when a fraternity boy moves into the same house his father once lived in and brought in friends such as Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld who sent the nation into a war based on lies and then had legal hacks such as Alberto Gonzales and John Woo justify torture if done in the name of freedom.
Illegal voting machines aided by the US Supreme Court and a Democratic Party that rolled over as easily as a drunken sorority girl at a frat party allowed Paulson and Wall Street bankers and Washington DC power brokers free reign at the White House from 2000 to 2008, more than enough time to apply the coup d'état to a once great nation.
What happened between 2000 and 2008 in the White House is so much more egregious than the few blow jobs that Clinton got from Monica Lewinsky (all that money spent and we still never got an exact accounting) and yet the crimes of Bush and Cheney et. al. will probably never be investigated nor will justice ever be served on those who so callously used their power to serve it to others.
The pursuit of Bill Clinton over a blow job and the non-pursuit of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney for their callous disregard of the truth and the US Constitution is an indictment of America itself.
What America chooses to prosecute and what America chooses to deny is a direct indictment of America and the “values” it so loudly proclaims to others. In the future, America should be more careful as the world is not as swayed by the distorted reflection America sees in its own media.
>>>dryfruit wrote: This may sound simplistic but the government needs to print more money that can go in to circulation right away.
Galenwainwright replied: Yeah. Thats exactly what the German Wiemar Republic did.
Galenwainwright, that is the conventional history. I read another take on that in the book Web of Debt - let me quote some portions here - it's a bit long, but the history of money takes a bit of reading:)
***************
The Treaty of Versailles had imposed crushing reparations payments on the German people, who were expected to reimburse the costs of the war for all participants — costs totaling three times the value of all the property in the country. Speculation in the German mark had caused it to plummet, precipitating one of the worst runaway inflations in modern times. At its peak, a wheelbarrow full of 100 billion-mark banknotes could not buy a loaf of bread. The national treasury was empty, and huge numbers of homes and farms had been lost to the banks and speculators. People were living in hovels and starving. ... Germany had no choice but to succumb to debt slavery to international lenders.
Or so it seemed. Hitler and the National Socialists, who came to power in 1933, thwarted the international banking cartel by issuing their own money. In this they took their cue from Abraham Lincoln, who funded the American Civil War with government-issued paper money called "Greenbacks." Hitler began his national credit program by devising a plan of public works. Projects earmarked for funding included flood control, repair of public buildings and private residences, and construction of new buildings, roads, bridges, canals, and port facilities. The projected cost of the various programs was fixed at one billion units of the national currency. One billion non-inflationary bills of exchange, called Labor Treasury Certificates, were then issued against this cost. Millions of people were put to work on these projects, and the workers were paid with the Treasury Certificates. This government-issued money wasn't backed by gold, but it was backed by something of real value. It was essentially a receipt for labor and materials delivered to the government. Hitler said, "for every mark that was issued we required the equivalent of a mark's worth of work done or goods produced." The workers then spent the Certificates on other goods and services, creating more jobs for more people.
Within two years, the unemployment problem had been solved and the country was back on its feet. It had a solid, stable currency, no debt, and no inflation, at a time when millions of people in the United States and other Western countries were still out of work and living on welfare. Germany even managed to restore foreign trade, although it was denied foreign credit and was faced with an economic boycott abroad. It did this by using a barter system: equipment and commodities were exchanged directly with other countries, circumventing the international banks. This system of direct exchange occurred without debt and without trade deficits. Germany's economic experiment, like Lincoln's, was short-lived; but it left some lasting monuments to its success, including the famous Autobahn, the world's first extensive superhighway.
Although Hitler has rightfully gone down in infamy in the history books, he was quite popular with the German people, at least for a time. Stephen Zarlenga suggests in The Lost Science of Money that this was because he temporarily rescued Germany from English economic theory — the theory that money must be borrowed against the gold reserves of a private banking cartel rather than issued outright by the government. According to Canadian researcher Dr. Henry Makow, this may have been a chief reason Hitler had to be stopped: he had sidestepped the international bankers and created his own money. Makow quotes from the 1938 interrogation of C. G. Rakovsky, one of the founders of Soviet Bolsevism and a Trotsky intimate, who was tried in show trials in the USSR under Stalin. According to Rakovsky, Hitler had actually been funded by the international bankers, through their agent Hjalmar Schacht, in order to control Stalin, who had usurped power from their agent Trotsky. But Hitler had become an even bigger threat than Stalin when he had taken the bold step of printing his own money. Rakovsky said:
[Hitler] took over for himself the privilege of manufacturing money and not only physical moneys, but also financial ones; he took over the untouched machinery of falsification and put it to work for the benefit of the state . . . . Are you capable of imagining what would have come . . . if it had infected a number of other states . . . . If you can, then imagine its counterrevolutionary functions.
Economist Henry C K Liu writes of Germany's remarkable transformation:
The Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, at a time when its economy was in total collapse, with ruinous war-reparation obligations and zero prospects for foreign investment or credit. Yet through an independent monetary policy of sovereign credit and a full-employment public-works program, the Third Reich was able to turn a bankrupt Germany, stripped of overseas colonies it could exploit, into the strongest economy in Europe within four years, even before armament spending began.
In Billions for the Bankers, Debts for the People, Sheldon Emry commented:
Germany issued debt-free and interest-free money from 1935 and on, accounting for its startling rise from the depression to a world power in 5 years. Germany financed its entire government and war operation from 1935 to 1945 without gold and without debt, and it took the whole Capitalist and Communist world to destroy the German power over Europe and bring Europe back under the heel of the Bankers. Such history of money does not even appear in the textbooks of public (government) schools today.
...continued below...
...continued from above...
Another Look at the Weimar Hyperinflation
What does appear in modern textbooks is the disastrous runaway inflation suffered in 1923 by the Weimar Republic (the common name for the republic that governed Germany from 1919 to 1933). The radical devaluation of the German mark is cited as the textbook example of what can go wrong when governments are given the unfettered power to print money. That is what it is cited for; but in the complex world of economics, things are not always as they seem. The Weimar financial crisis began with the impossible reparations payments imposed at the Treaty of Versailles. Schacht, who was currency commissioner for the Republic, complained:
The Treaty of Versailles is a model of ingenious measures for the economic destruction of Germany. . . . [T]he Reich could not find any way of holding its head above the water other than by the inflationary expedient of printing bank notes.
That is what he said at first. But Zarlenga writes that Schacht proceeded in his 1967 book The Magic of Money "to let the cat out of the bag, writing in German, with some truly remarkable admissions that shatter the 'accepted wisdom' the financial community has promulgated on the German hyperinflation." Schacht revealed that it was the privately-owned Reichsbank, not the German government, that was pumping new currency into the economy. Like the U.S. Federal Reserve, the Reichsbank was overseen by appointed government officials but was operated for private gain. What drove the wartime inflation into hyperinflation was speculation by foreign investors, who would sell the mark short, betting on its decreasing value. In the manipulative device known as the short sale, speculators borrow something they don't own, sell it, then "cover" by buying it back at the lower price. Speculation in the German mark was made possible because the Reichsbank made massive amounts of currency available for borrowing, marks that were created with accounting entries on the bank's books and lent at a profitable interest. When the Reichsbank could not keep up with the voracious demand for marks, other private banks were allowed to create them out of nothing and lend them at interest as well.
According to Schacht, then, not only did the government not cause the Weimar hyperinflation, but it was the government that got it under control. The Reichsbank was put under strict government regulation, and prompt corrective measures were taken to eliminate foreign speculation, by eliminating easy access to loans of bank-created money. Hitler then got the country back on its feet with his Treasury Certificates issued Greenback-style by the government.
Schacht actually disapproved of this government fiat money, and wound up getting fired as head of the Reichsbank when he refused to issue it (something that may have saved him at the Nuremberg trials). But he acknowledged in his later memoirs that allowing the government to issue the money it needed had not produced the price inflation predicted by classical economic theory. He surmised that this was because factories were sitting idle and people were unemployed. In this he agreed with John Maynard Keynes: when the resources were available to increase productivity, adding new money to the economy did not increase prices; it increased goods and services. Supply and demand increased together, leaving prices unaffected.
Highintel: Can we do better?
Alcyon,
Thank you for these two enlightening posts on history and economy.
They are insightful contributions, and we can do better.
Thank you for the enlightenment.
Buried in the latter part of your post is an explanation of the private *Reichsbank* being the real culprit of the Weimar hyperinflation, just as the Federal Reserve of today is doing the same thing.
I am hoping, as another poster puts it 'we are smarter than that'.
But I'm not relying on it.
Individually, people can be quite brilliant. But when they gather together, they tend to become panicy herd animals.
Walk in peace.
Soon we'll be borrowing money from the FED to prosecute the FED insiders. How sad.