Grab Your Raft Because a River of Inflation is About to Sweep the USA Economy
Seems like there is a river of money flowing and headed for the falls. Hundreds of billions for corporate welfare. Short term interest rates at record lows. Mortgage rates are still better than any time over the past 30 years.
But foreclosures keep rising and folks just keep going broke. Why should this be happening? Is it not true that cash is being pumped into the economy?
The money rain has been torrential but the banks built a dam and the level is rising dangerously. To be sure, there are some leaks here and there but the watchkeepers are sleeping through the alarms. When it finally breaks the overflow is going to be inflation that rivals developing nations. And it is going to go over a Niagara Falls into an abyss of future obligation.
Though some money is starting to trickle out it still seems to dry up before it gets to producers, workers, and spenders. So capitalism as we like it is just plain anemic. Underemployed folks, like Tom Persinger who now makes 24k/yr as a nurses aid, have have pulled significant power from the economy. He used to make 60k/yr for GM before they got bailed out. He is relatively lucky though. Just under one out of ten Americans have no job at all so they cannot contribute earnings so that others have jobs. But the government is also manipulating statistics. Prior to the Clinton administration that 10% would have been closer to 21% unemployment which certainly echoes the Great Depression.
California is issuing IOU's, Rhode Island shuts down for a couple of weeks - and all the rest of the states are scrambling to raise taxes and cut spending. Nothing is secure anymore.
Nervous about the stock market? Just when it seems equities are stabilizing you and every other investor gets faked out when they dump again. Real estate, though housing markets seem to no longer be in free fall, is still causing anxiety and hand wringing.
A delicious irony is apparent when you consider that the economies of Germany and France my be recovering faster than America. By any measure they have long been tipping to left with socialism being way more acceptible, for now at least, than the USA. And those cynical professional bond traders are saying that the Fed is ensuring low interest rates by cranking out more money to meet our mind boggling present and future political obligations.
So the bankers are caught in a Hobson's choice where the only logical thing is to do nothing and reap the taxpayers largesse. After all, if they loan out all that money so people can buy assets that are not going to appreciate soon and jobs are still hard to come by then they lose.
The tragic consequence of all of this gross mismanagement is what third world countries usually experience - very, very high inflation. The government has borrowed to oblivion and the money is being printed with abandon. The banks must eventually let that money go. When is does we will be paying dearly. - 23226
But foreclosures keep rising and folks just keep going broke. Why should this be happening? Is it not true that cash is being pumped into the economy?
The money rain has been torrential but the banks built a dam and the level is rising dangerously. To be sure, there are some leaks here and there but the watchkeepers are sleeping through the alarms. When it finally breaks the overflow is going to be inflation that rivals developing nations. And it is going to go over a Niagara Falls into an abyss of future obligation.
Though some money is starting to trickle out it still seems to dry up before it gets to producers, workers, and spenders. So capitalism as we like it is just plain anemic. Underemployed folks, like Tom Persinger who now makes 24k/yr as a nurses aid, have have pulled significant power from the economy. He used to make 60k/yr for GM before they got bailed out. He is relatively lucky though. Just under one out of ten Americans have no job at all so they cannot contribute earnings so that others have jobs. But the government is also manipulating statistics. Prior to the Clinton administration that 10% would have been closer to 21% unemployment which certainly echoes the Great Depression.
California is issuing IOU's, Rhode Island shuts down for a couple of weeks - and all the rest of the states are scrambling to raise taxes and cut spending. Nothing is secure anymore.
Nervous about the stock market? Just when it seems equities are stabilizing you and every other investor gets faked out when they dump again. Real estate, though housing markets seem to no longer be in free fall, is still causing anxiety and hand wringing.
A delicious irony is apparent when you consider that the economies of Germany and France my be recovering faster than America. By any measure they have long been tipping to left with socialism being way more acceptible, for now at least, than the USA. And those cynical professional bond traders are saying that the Fed is ensuring low interest rates by cranking out more money to meet our mind boggling present and future political obligations.
So the bankers are caught in a Hobson's choice where the only logical thing is to do nothing and reap the taxpayers largesse. After all, if they loan out all that money so people can buy assets that are not going to appreciate soon and jobs are still hard to come by then they lose.
The tragic consequence of all of this gross mismanagement is what third world countries usually experience - very, very high inflation. The government has borrowed to oblivion and the money is being printed with abandon. The banks must eventually let that money go. When is does we will be paying dearly. - 23226
About the Author:
My Market Friend is Paul Kluskowskis's blog. It is chock-a-block with up-to-date financial, economic, and market news. He is a financial manager at T/R Financial Management Group. He has been in the business for over 10 years and writes extensively with many articles and three ebooks to his credit. Paul also manages the PINGP Work Control Center Mgr at Xcel Energy. You can sign up for his financial servicesand newletter at My Market Friend


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