Paul Farrell, writing for Marketwatch, has been stirring around that festering brew that is our financial system and with every ladle he picks up more toil and more trouble. But as so many financial news outlets seem unable to deprogramme themselves from their bullish delusion, it is good to see the occasional doom-monger express the same views as so many of the general public, or at least those that post on news forums. The really depressing thing is that stacking all the problems up in one big pile shows how completely rudderless this current financial ship is - it could be argued that a sinking ship has no need of a rudder, just lots and lots of life-boats. Anybody who is still naive enough to think that the big boys at the top know what they are doing is likely to be sold a cut price life jacket that has been slipped through quality control and which won't work when you need it.
With two major crashes in quick succession there is little to be hopeful about. Farrell lays the blame fairly and squarely at the doors of those free-market ideologues who publicly pushed their "liberal" laissez faire propaganda whilst in private being fully aware of what could go wrong... and of how horrific it could be. The big shocker came from the new Treasury secretary two years before the meltdown: Bloomberg News reports that shortly after leaving Wall Street as Goldman Sachs' CEO, Henry Paulson was at Camp David warning the president and his staff of "over-the-counter derivatives as an example of financial innovation that could, under certain circumstances, blow up in Wall Street's face and affect the whole economy." Not surprisingly Paulson wants to quit before he can be prosecuted.
But as these people have no regard whatsoever for the wider population, why are people so feeble in their response, so powerless to somehow return the disdain. These free market magicians are of a very black hue, and as we can witness every day they will do whatever it takes to keep your money flowing in their direction. Even if it isn't your money, it will be soon as taxes will go up and jobs will be lost.
The doomsday list has 30 items on it - and probably rising. You can read the full article at Marketwatch, I just wanted to highlight a few of the more nefarious deeds.
America's credit rating may soon be downgraded below AAA. I have been waiting for this but the huge political threats emanating from the USA have, for the time being, saved it from the ignominy of being downgraded. The idea that Treasuries are a "flight to safety" seems laughable given the pathetic interest rates on offer. Indeed the Japanese Yen has continued to climb with respect to the US Dollar at a time when Sterling and Euro are getting clattered. The theory that this recent Dollar rise is due to repatriation of wealth by American companies sounds far more plausible. At some point, the family silver will all have been sold off and the dreaded thought of having to sell all the land and homes comes starkly into view. Also, as unemployment rises so tax returns to government fall off. At some point, the mechanism of paying off credit with more credit will fail at the government level, just as it is failing at the corporate and personal one.
Fed refusal to disclose $2 trillion loans, now the new "shadow banking system". Although listed as a separate item, this actually goes hand in hand with Congress has no oversight of $700 billion, and Paulson's Wall Street Trojan Horse. Taken together, they are further proof that the Federal Reserve is following its own agenda that may, or may not, have anything to do with the public interest, not even for Americans. To see who really benefits from government one just has to look at how Government policy is dictated by 42,000 myopic, highly paid, greedy lobbyists. Elections are just inconvenient exercises to preserve the facade of democracy. The media enjoys whipping up partisan feelings so as to avoid real debate. It is quite astonishing how little informed debate has been taking place within the corporate media. The internet has played an important role in this last US election but the power it can wield is still in the testing phase. Many forum discussions are actually led by the corporate media agenda, rather than leading it.
So what can the individual do? This blog is not really about political activism or lifestyle management, but it is about trying to take responsibility for one's own finances, and especially one's investments. If there is one lesson from these two recent bubbles, is that there is absolutely nobody you can trust to tell you what to do. Learning to look at the numbers and ignore the media is a valuable step forward.
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