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For the Record (Read 176775 times)
perceptions_now
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1050 - Aug 3rd, 2014 at 5:47pm
 
Dow Jones -  Largest daily percentage losses

Rank              Date          Close      Net Change       % Change
1      1987-10-19      1,738.74      −508.00      −22.61
2      1929-10-28      260.64      −38.33      −12.82
3      1899-12-18      58.27      −7.94      −11.99
4      1929-10-29      230.07      −30.57      −11.73
5      1929-11-06      232.13      −25.55      −9.92
6      1932-08-12      63.11      −5.79      −8.40
7      1907-03-14      76.23      −6.89      −8.29
8      1987-10-26      1,793.93      −156.83      −8.04
9      2008-10-15      8,577.91      −733.08      −7.87
10      1933-07-21      88.71      −7.55      −7.84
11      1937-10-18      125.73      −10.57      −7.75
12      2008-12-01      8,149.09      −679.95      −7.70
13      2008-10-09      8,579.19      −678.91      −7.33
14      1917-02-01      88.52      −6.91      −7.24
15      1997-10-27      7,161.15      −554.26      −7.18
16      1932-10-05      66.07      −5.09      −7.15
17      2001-09-17      8,920.70      −684.81      −7.13
18      1931-09-24      107.79      −8.20      −7.07
19      1933-07-20      96.26      −7.32      −7.07
20      2008-09-29      10,365.45      −777.68      −6.98

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_daily_changes_in_the_Dow_Jones_Indu...
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It is likely, there will "shortly" be another day entering this list!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1051 - Aug 7th, 2014 at 7:50pm
 
Unemployment surges to 12-year high at 6.4 per cent; youth jobless figure hits 14 pc


Unemployment has jumped to a 12-year high of 6.4 per cent, despite the loss of only 300 jobs.

Bureau of Statistics figures show the jobless rate surged from June's reading of 6 per cent to 6.4 per cent last month - the worst reading since August 2002.

Young people have been particularly hard-hit, with unemployment for 15-24-year-olds hitting 14.1 per cent - the highest level since October 2001.

The jobless rate for the 15-19-year-old subset jumped even more to 20.4 per cent - the highest since April 1997 - and was 30.1 per cent amongst those looking for full-time work.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-08-07/unemployment-surges-to-12-year-high-at-64-...
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These figures will jump up & down , But it would be likely that they will trend up, over the years ahead, irrespective whether the Liberals or Labor are in power!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1052 - Aug 7th, 2014 at 7:58pm
 
Russia imposes sanctions on US, EU and Australia over Ukraine action


RUSSIA is introducing a “full embargo” on most food imports from EU, US, and other Western countries including Australia which have imposed sanctions against Moscow over its policy on Ukraine, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev says.

“Russia is introducing a full embargo on import of beef, pork, fruit and vegetable produce, poultry, fish, cheese, milk and dairy products from the European Union, United States, Australia, Canada and Norway,” Medvedev told a government meeting in televised remarks.

The move announced by Medvedev today was taken on orders from President Vladimir Putin in response to sanctions imposed on Russia by the West over the crisis in Ukraine.

Medvedev said Russia was also considering banning Western carriers from flying over Russia on flights to and from Asia - a move that would significantly swell costs and increase flight time. He said the decision on that hasn’t been made yet.

“The protectionist rhetoric from Russia has been gaining momentum,” said analysts of VTB Capital in a research note today, adding that restrictions had so far been “the primary reason behind elevated food inflation in Russia.”

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/foreign-affairs/russia-imposes-...
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I would suggest there is an expectation in Russia that Europe, the USA & the West in general, have more to lose than Russia, as Europe needs Russian Energy supplies!

So, Russia may think it can "push" and the West won't "push" back, which may well be correct, up to a point?

However, it is now a very dangerous game, being played for very high stakes & miscalculations could ratchet out of control very quickly, with some very serious consequences for all!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1053 - Aug 7th, 2014 at 8:13pm
 
Don't Buy This Dip: The Fed Is Not Your Friend


During the last 64 months “buying the dips” has been a fabulously successful proposition. As shown in the sizzling graph of the NASDAQ 100 below, at it recent peak just under 4,000 this index of the high-growth, big cap non-financials stood at an astonishing 3.5X its March 2009 low. Moreover, during that 64 month period, there were but five minor market corrections—-the three largest reflecting just a 7-8% dip from the previous interim high. And as the index closed upon its current nosebleed heights, the dips became increasingly shallower, meaning that the reward for buying setbacks came early and often.

So yesterday’s 2% dip will undoubtedly be construed as still another buying opportunity by the well-trained seals and computerized algos which populate the Wall Street casino. But that could be a fatal mistake for one overpowering reason: The radical monetary policy experiment behind this parabolic graph is in the final stages of its appointed path toward self-destruction.

In fact, this soaring index reflects the most artificial, unsustainable and dangerous Fed created financial bubble ever. That’s because its was the untoward product of a completely busted monetary mechanism. What has happened is that the Fed’s historic credit expansion channel of monetary transmission has been frozen shut ever since day one of the massive Bernanke monetary expansion which began in August 2007, but went into warp-drive in the weeks after the Lehman event a year later.

Yet this madcap money printing campaign was a drastic error because it failed to account for the immense roadblock to traditional monetary stimulus that had been built up over the last several decades—namely, “peak debt” in the household and business sector. This condition means that monetary easing and drastic interest rate cuts have not elicited a surge of consumer borrowing and business capital spending and hiring as during past business cycle recoveries.

Instead, the entire tsunami of monetary expansion has flowed into the Wall Street gambling channel, inflating drastically every asset class that could be traded, leveraged or hypothecated. Stated differently, 68 months of zero interest rates had virtually no impact outside the the canyons of Wall Street.

But now that the monetary flood is cresting, financial asset values hang in mid-air like Wile E. Coyote. Stranded there, they are nakedly exposed to market discovery any moment now that the real economy and sustainable corporate earnings dwell in a region far below.

During the 78 months since the last peak, household credit has shrunk by 5%. Nothing like this has every happened before. Not even remotely close.

The reason for the sharp difference in the most recent cycle is that Keynesian stimulus was always an economic trick, not an permanently repeatable exercise in enlightened monetary management.

What this means is that the motor force of traditional Keynesian expansion is gone.

The coming funding crisis of the social insurance entitlements—Medicare and Social Security—will surely jolt the American public into a realization that higher private savings will be essential to retirement survival. Accordingly, the household savings rate has nowhere to go but up in the years just ahead.

In any event, it is no mystery as to why business capital spending remains stuck on the flat-line.

During the most recent quarter, real spending for plant and equipment was still 4% below its late 2007 peak——an outcome that is not even remotely comparable to the 10-25% surges that have occurred during comparable periods of prior business cycles.

Business is not rushing to the barricades to add to capacity because it is plainly evident that consumer demand is not growing at traditional recovery cycle rates; and that it will never again do so given the constraints of peak debt and the baby boom retirement cycle ahead.

At the end of the day, even the heavily massaged data from the Washington statistical mills cannot hide this reality.

Notwithstanding the Fed massive balance sheet expansion since its first big rate cut in August 2007—-that is, from $800 billion to $4.4 trillion—–real final sales have grown at less than a 1% CAGR since then.

There is nothing like this tepid rate of trend growth for any comparable period in modern history.

All of this means that the financial markets are drastically over-capitalizing earnings and over-valuing all asset classes. So as the Fed and its central bank confederates around the world increasingly run out of excuses for extending the radical monetary experiments of the present era, even the gamblers will come to recognize who is really the Wile E Coyote in the piece.


http://seekingalpha.com/article/2379485-dont-buy-this-dip-the-fed-is-not-your-fr...
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I would substantially agree with most of the article, although there are a few other issues involved as well and many other countries, including Australia, are & will experience the flow-on!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1054 - Aug 18th, 2014 at 10:03pm
 
Japan's Keynesian Demise: A Cautionary Tale For Our Times


I remember it well. That is, the fiscal rectitude of the old Japan.

During early 1981 as the Reagan White House prepared its radical fiscal plan - what Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker famously called a "riverboat gamble" - we were visited by a high ranking delegation from the Japanese finance ministry (MOF). It is no overstatement to say that they were absolutely shocked by the administration's plan to enact a sweeping 30% income tax cut and double the defense budget - while expecting that it would all balance out as a result of surging economic growth immediately and large domestic spending cuts down the road.

The MOF men feared the worst - politely noting the possibility that there would be insufficient economic growth and spending cuts to pay for the administration's monumental tax reductions and defense build-up. Then the US would experience an outbreak of massive fiscal deficits - an unprecedented peacetime development that could roil the entire global financial system. In that apprehension the MOF men turned out to be dead right, and not because they were especially clairvoyant.

Economic policy officials did not have to be hectored about deficits and the fact that there is no such thing as a fiscal free lunch. Indeed, notwithstanding a government led 30-year drive to rebuild their economy from the complete devastation of WWII, Japan's public debt was only 50% of GDP as of 1980.

That was then. Today Japan's public debt is 5X greater relative to the size of its economy and tips the scales at 250% of GDP. That is off-the-charts relative to all other large developed economies and has no parallel in previous history. In the interim, of course, Japan succumbed to the Keynesian stimulus disease, betting that after its thundering financial meltdown during the early 1990s it could borrow and print its way back to the prosperity it had known during the period of its post-war economic miracle.

The chart below is thus a cautionary tale of our times. In exactly one generation of leadership, Japan's fiscal rectitude was lost entirely. As is made clear in what follows, its fiscal equation is now beyond rescue.

...

The slippery slope leading to today's Keynesian demise starts with the fact that Japan's post-war boom wasn't a miracle at all. From the smoldering industrial ruins left by the allies' final assault, the Japanese economy had bounded upward for three decades owing to a massive spree of public and private investment and a sweeping mercantilist industrial development and export promotion policy. The former depended upon an extraordinarily high household savings rate and the latter was fueled by blatantly protectionist policies that kept imports out and the yen's exchange rate far below its true economic value.

Needless to say, neither prong of Japan's economic miracle was sustainable. By the mid-1980s the Japanese capital goods and export sectors were enormously over-built. This meant that the double-digit growth in fixed asset investment which had powered Japan's post-war GDP growth was destined for a sharp fall.

That's exactly what happened after mid-1985 when a new financial sheriff came to the US Treasury. James Baker had matriculated from the Texas School of "America first" economics and did not hesitate to lower the boom on Japan's export driven prosperity by way of the Plaza Accords of September 1985. Under the pressure of Baker's concerted global campaign of yen buying by the major central banks, Japan's exchange rate soared from about 260 per dollar to 130 over the next several years.

...

In the first round, the BOJ slashed interest rates in early 1986 in order to stimulate domestic expansion, but Japan's problem was not that the cost of capital was too high or that it suffered from insufficient industrial capacity. In fact, it was already swamped with excess capacity in steel, autos, machinery, consumer electronics and much else.

So what Japan needed at the time was higher market clearing interest rates to thwart its now chronic over-investment in export capacity. Instead, the BOJ's ultra easy money flowed into the financial sector, fueling a massive bubble in real estate and corporate stocks and bonds.

This initial round of financialization induced businesses to drastically expand their debt loads. Accordingly, non-financial debt in Japan nearly tripled from its early 1980s level. As shown below, the Nikkei stock index went parabolic, rising by nearly 4X during the 50 months after the Plaza Accord.

...

The bubble was especially acute in the real estate sector. At one point the value of land in Tokyo was equal to the total for the US. And there is no doubt as to the cause: the BOJ unleashed a monumental speculative frenzy based on cheap debt and the perception that Japan was "different" because its central bank had everyone's back.


...




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Re: For the Record
Reply #1055 - Aug 18th, 2014 at 10:12pm
 
Japan's Keynesian Demise: A Cautionary Tale For Our Times (Cont)


Needless to say, the bubble burst in spectacular fashion. From top to bottom the Nikkei dropped by 80% and real estate values by even more.Yet the painful liquidation of the BOJ's financial bubble during the early 1990s was only the prelude. What actually happened was that the real economy in Japan went through a drastic downshift in its growth capacity owing to a more realistic exchange rate and the unavoidable disappearance of the double digit growth rates of fixed assets which had accompanied the one-time expansion of its industrial plant during the boom era. Accordingly, its trend rate of real GDP growth fell from 4-8% rates during the boom years to just 1% on average during the 1990s.

This unwelcome slowdown reflected the laws of economics speaking out loud.

Unfortunately, the mandarins who run Japan Inc. did not understand that they had been booming on borrowed time during the post-war heydays. That meant that Japan's now drastically imbalanced and debt saturated economy would remain stuck in the mud in the absence of a through-going dismantlement of its rigged domestic markets and protectionist trade policies.

The machinery of Japan's politics was all about distribution of construction, credit and corruption among the LDP's constituencies.

In the halcyon times, this generated roads and bridges to export ports and thereby facilitated growth of production, jobs and foreign markets - even if inefficiently done. But after the post-Plaza bubble crash, it merely churned out roads and bridges to nowhere.

The chart below shows the fiscal catastrophe which resulted. During the two decades after 1990, Japan's government expenditures rose by 45%, while its general revenues fell by 15-20%. Accordingly, a massive permanent fiscal gap was opened that fueled the parabolic rise of its debt ratio, as shown above. And this wasn't just garden variety fiscal profligacy. As shown below, during most of this century, Japan's general revenues have not even covered 50% of its expenditures. The math is terminal.

...

To be sure, the Keynesians would complain that the above chart is not a picture of "runaway spending" as denounced by Republican orators from time immemorial. And no, it is not. Spending growth has averaged less than 3% per year since 1990.

However, that observation is irrelevant to Japan's circumstances and fails to grapple with the real fiscal driver. Namely, after 40 years of boom and the final BOJ bubble, Japan had reached a condition of "peak debt." Already by 1990, total credit market debt - public and private - exceeded 350% of GDP, and by now it has soared to in excess of 500%.

In fact, nominal GDP has grown by only 1% per year since 1990, reflecting Japan's stagnant (and now shrinking) work force and tepid productivity growth.


Needless to say, 1% growth in money incomes did not leave any room at all for net tax reductions, and could not remotely accommodate the spasm of public spending that has characterized Japan's post-1990 Keynesian debauch. Yet prodded by mainstream economists in the US government and international institutions, Japan had dismantled its tax base in one effort after another to stimulate short-term investment. Its nominal revenues consequently fell continuously for nearly two decades.
There is nothing like it in developed world experience.


Except... except that Japan Inc. has found it, and heartily embraced it in the form of Abenomics and its prior variants of QE and open-ended monetary expansion. Based on the lamentable advice of Ben Bernanke and other visiting fireman of the modern school of Keynesian central banking, Japan embraced the "deflation" myth and the destructive notion that the central bank must run its printing presses until inflation is revived to the 2% or so range - thereby reflating nominal GDP, aggregate demand and the wheels of production and jobs growth in the real economy.

To begin with, of course, Japan has not suffered from anything that remotely resembles honest deflation. In most recent months, Japan's CPI index stood at about 100 - the exact place it posted 21 years ago in early 1993.

In fact, the only "deflation" that Japan has suffered has been financial sector deflation - real estate and equity prices and private borrowing - and exactly so. The heights reached during the 1980s bubble were utterly artificial, unstable and an enormous deformation of capital markets.

Nevertheless, Japan adopted "ZIRP" in 1999 and thereby piled Keynesian central banking on top of its already hemorrhaging fiscal equation. As a consequence, BOJ's balance sheet has exploded, rising from about 10% of GDP to nearly 50% today. That's what it took by way of massive monetization of existing financial assets to pin Japan's money market rates at zero and to push its yield curve outward along the flat line.

This amounted to financial repression on steroids, but it has been to no avail. During the approximate 15 years since it originally adopted ZIRP, Japan's real GDP has limped along at 0.9% per year.

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Re: For the Record
Reply #1056 - Aug 18th, 2014 at 10:30pm
 
Japan's Keynesian Demise: A Cautionary Tale For Our Times (Cont)


But ZIRP has had enormous and untoward collateral effects that taken together comprise the proximate cause of Japan's impending fiscal demise. First, Japan's vaunted household savings rate - the feature that funded its post-war CapEx boom - has ended up in the dustbin of history. During the last two decades it has dropped from the high teens as a percent of disposable income to a US style 3-4%. Indeed, it has gone from the highest rate in the world in the early 1980s to the lowest at present.

...

This untimely collapse of the savings rate will prove especially destructive for the retirement colony that comprises Japan's demographic future. Saddled with towering public debts and rapidly shrinking work force, Japan will swiftly consume its accumulated savings as its retirement rolls soar. A decade or two down the road it will become an international pauper.

If it gets that far. The other collateral effect of ZIRP has been a gigantic fiscal lie. Namely, the delusion that Japan's massive government debts can be financed at close to zero nominal carry cost for the indefinite future.

That's why the prospect of interest rate "normalization" is such a fiscal nightmare.


And that brings us to the folly of Abenomics and the BOJ's latest round of QE - a madcap rate of balance sheet expansion that would be equivalent to $250 billion per month at the scale of the US economy. At this rate, the BOJ is absorbing almost all of the available government bond supply and on some days has actually left the private market bidless. Indeed, it is monetizing assets at such a frenzied rate that it has now become a major buyer of ETFs and other equities. In effect, the central bank in Japan no longer merely runs the casino, it has become the casino.

The fact is, after the most recent quarter's GDP wipeout, Japan's real GDP is only 0.8% larger than it was five quarters ago when Abenomics was installed at the BOJ. And therein lies the frightful future.


Were the BOJ to actually achieve and sustain its 2% inflation target the Japanese government bond market would either collapse, or need to drastically reprice. The former case amounts to disaster now, the latter would entail fiscal collapse very soon as Japan's revenues would be soon devoured by a surging carry cost on its towering debt.

And that gets to the ragged Keynesian excuse that all will be well once the jump in the consumption tax from 5% to 8% is fully digested. But here's the problem: this is just the beginning of an endless march upwards of Japan's tax burden to close the yawning fiscal gap left after the current round of tax increases, and to finance its growing retirement colony.

So there is no possibility that Abenomics will result in "escape velocity" Japan style and that Japan can grow its way out of its enormous fiscal trap. Instead, nominal and real growth will remain pinned to the flatline owing to peak debt, soaring retirements, a shrinking tax base and a tax burden which will rise as far as the eye can see.

It is a cautionary tale for our times. And Japan, unfortunately, is just patient zero.


http://seekingalpha.com/article/2428295-japans-keynesian-demise-a-cautionary-tal...
==========================================
And so, Japan is the "Canary in the Global Economic Coalmine" and where they have gone, we and others will follow!

Japan were the first to experience the Great Demographic shift, which is now flowing thru most other nations.

Since that Great Demographic shift began, there has emerged two other massive factors -
1) Energy - Supply Shortages & Price escalation!
2) Climate Change - Forcing Future Food & Water Supply shortages! 


Oh & btw, it would seem lowering a countries exchange rate to the US$ may not create the outcomes that some think it should?
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1057 - Aug 18th, 2014 at 11:16pm
 
...like I said 2 years ago: Great Depression.
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1058 - Aug 20th, 2014 at 3:14pm
 
The Italian Runaway Train


By now almost everyone and their granddad knows that Italy is back in recession following the 0.2% GDP contraction in the second quarter.
...

Not only did this result suggest that Italy was now in a triple dip recession (or a twenty year decline), it also meant that GDP was back at the same level it had in 2000, when the country entered the Euro currency union.
...

The problem is that Italy has an appallingly low trend GDP growth rate - possibly negative at this point - and nothing which has happened since the financial crisis ended suggests it is going to improve radically anytime soon; in fact there are good reasons to think that growth could even deteriorate further.
...

In the first place Italy's working age population is now falling, and many young educated Italians are leaving to work elsewhere.
...

And now, not only do we have the legacy then of high debt and low growth, a new problem has emerged: low inflation or even deflation. Italy's inflation has fallen to zero.
...

The combination of low inflation and low growth means that it is the evolution of nominal GDP that really matters now. Nominal GDP is non-inflation corrected GDP (or GDP at current rather than constant prices). If inflation remains low or even becomes negative, then nominal GDP will hardly increase and may even continue to contract (as has happened in Japan). The result is bound to be that the gross government debt to GDP ratio rises above the 135.6% it hit in March.
...

One of the arguments frequently advanced about how this dynamic could be turned around would be for Italy to run a "large" primary budget surplus. Now the emphasis here is on large since the country has in fact run a primary surplus (income - expenditure before paying debt interest) since the early 1990s, but that hasn't stopped the weight of the debt climbing and climbing.

Is it plausible that Italy could run an average primary surplus of 6.6% of GDP over a decade? Hardly - in particular this implies that on average, every year, the government would be draining out 6.6% of GDP from domestic demand via taxation. Yet as I have noted many times, domestic demand is precisely the weak point in the Italian economy (secular stagnation, ageing population).
...

Italy's situation is to some extent replicated in other countries on the periphery (Ireland sovereign debt to GDP 124%, Portugal 132.9%, Spain 96.8% and Greece 174.1%, all numbers as of March 2014) since almost all official forecasts anticipate an imminent turnaround in the debt dynamic.

Italy's debt now looks certain to climb towards 140% of GDP and beyond (maybe hitting that level as early as Q1 2015), meaning someone somewhere in the official sector should be able to recognize that it is not on a sustainable path.

Cases like Greece and Portugal are to some extent containable from an EU perspective since the economies are small enough for EU leaders to engage in some sort of extend and pretend via low coupons and long horizon maturities. But Italy's debt is simply too big to be manageable in this way.

The problem is that with the debt dynamics we have seen above the one thing Italy doesn't have at this point is time. It isn't a problem of the impact of a so called "debt snowball" as interest rate payments send debt levels spiraling upwards. If anything it's worse. Mario Draghi can, in theory, contain the debt interest problem, and if needs be along with it the capital repayments schedule. But the problem Italy has at the moment is one of the credibility of its debt, of the country being able to convincingly argue its trajectory is sustainable, of being able to convince the Germans that if the ECB were to buy bonds these they could EVER be redeemed.

Despite this Prime Minister Renzi continues to insist that his government's economic strategy is sound and will lift the country out of crisis.

If countries like Japan, Italy and Portugal are suffering from some local variant of one common pathology, then normal solutions are unlikely to work, and matters can deteriorate fast.


http://seekingalpha.com/article/2431615-the-italian-runaway-train?ifp=0
============================================
One thing, you can count on, with Politicians & Central Bankers is -
THEY WILL TELL YOU, WHAT THEY WANT YOU TO BELIEVE!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1059 - Aug 20th, 2014 at 3:16pm
 
Jasin wrote on Aug 18th, 2014 at 11:16pm:
...like I said 2 years ago: Great Depression.

Could be?
But, I would not use the adjective of Great, as it would definitely not be Great, for those living thru it!

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Reply #1060 - Aug 21st, 2014 at 12:00am
 
Yes - there is nothing 'great' about that Depression or this one.
Nor was I impressed with 'all of those' photos of the last Depression back in the Gatsby years. Proven to be 'hoaxed' by the Media who made things look far worse than they actually were. All staged environments with actors used.
Pretty disgusting thing to do.

So the piece above is  saying that although Italy is 'saving' money, its also going into debt 'spending' as well?  Huh
I know the Italian Police are trying to raise revenue anywhere and everywhere ...many a Marina is empty as Boat Owners (luxury Yachts, etc) refuse to pay the expensive mooring fees.

I guess this is what happens when you follow a Nation's Economic aim of making sure its 'Penis & Breast Enlargements are kept in trim' as a sign of Wealth.

I also still believe that the nations with GST are victims to a TAX by the USA. As soon as Canada received its GST, I knew something was up  Wink  It serves no purpose here in Australia
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1061 - Aug 25th, 2014 at 10:02pm
 
Debt And Taxes



Summary
America is trying to borrow its way out of recession.
US debt has increased by $7.5 trillion since Obama took office.
The debt that sustains us now will one day be our undoing.


The red flags contained in the national and global headlines that have come out thus far in 2014 should have spooked investors and economic forecasters. Instead the markets have barely noticed. It seems that the majority opinion on Wall Street and Washington is that we have entered an era of good fortune made possible by the benevolent hand of the Federal Reserve.

But unfortunately, everything has a price, even free money. Our current quest to push up asset prices at all costs will come back to bite all Americans squarely in the pocket book.

The Fed has held interest rates at zero for five consecutive years, it has purchased trillions of dollars of Treasury and mortgage-backed securities, and the Federal government has stimulated the economy through four consecutive trillion-dollar annual deficits. While these moves may once have been looked on as something shocking...now anything goes.

America is trying to borrow its way out of recession. We are creating debt now in order to push up prices and create the illusion of prosperity.

But rising asset prices do little to help the underlying economy. That is why we have been stuck in what some economists are calling a "jobless recovery." The real reason it's jobless is because it's not a real recovery!

As detailed in my special report, when President Obama took office at the end of 2008, the national debt was about $10 trillion. Just five years later it has surpassed a staggering $17.5 trillion. This raw increase is roughly equivalent to all the Federal debt accumulated from the birth of our republic to 2004!


To actually repay, we will have few options. We can cut government spending, raise taxes, borrow, or print. But as we have seen so often in recent years, neither political party has the will to either increase taxes or decrease spending.

So if cutting and taxing are off the table, we can expect borrowing and printing.

That is exactly what has been happening. In recent years, the Fed has bought approximately 60% of the debt issued by the Treasury. This has kept the bond market strong and interest rates extremely low. But a country can't buy its own debt with impunity indefinitely. In fact the Fed, by winding down its QE program by the end of 2014, has threatened to bring the party to an end.

Janet Yellen may talk about tightening someday, but she will continue to move the goalposts to avoid actually having to do so. (Or as she did this week, remove the goalposts altogether).
As global investors finally realize that the Fed has no credible exit strategy from its zero interest policy, they will fashion their own exit strategy from U.S. obligations. Should this happen, interest rates will spike, the dollar will plunge, and inflation's impact on consumer prices will be far more pronounced than it is today..
This is when the inflation tax will take a much larger bite out of our savings and paychecks. The debt that sustains us now will one day be our undoing.

http://seekingalpha.com/article/2444565-debt-and-taxes?ifp=0
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A few observations -
1) As can be seen, the USA has a Budget Emergency!

2) The USA has a massive Debt problem!

3) The USA has NO workable EXIT STRATEGY!

Given the above, I expect that the Bubble will pop sometime between now & the end of 2015, possibly with a nudge from the Russians, the Chinese & Oil nations, such as the Saudi Arabia!

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Re: For the Record
Reply #1062 - Aug 25th, 2014 at 10:20pm
 
WA's credit rating downgraded second time in less than a year


Western Australia has suffered another downgrade of its credit rating due to the state's spiralling debt.

Credit rating agency Moody's has followed Standard and Poor's decision, and stripped WA of its AAA rating, pushing it down to Aa1.


It is the second credit ratings downgrade in less than a year, and follows a period of strong growth of the resources sector and increased reliance by the State Government on mining royalties.

In a statement, the agency said its decision to downgrade was due to current debt levels and an over-reliance on volatile mining royalties.

It also cited a weak policy response by the State Government in dealing with its debt problem.

It is the worst assessment by a ratings agency since the Government came to power in 2008.

Then, debt was just over $3 billion, but it now sits at $22 billion.


Deficit tipped to increase in government sector
Moody's said the government sector had experienced "persistent" deficits, averaging 5 per cent of revenue from 2008/09 to 2013/14.

This year it is expected to hit 6.2 per cent, as spending continues to outpace revenue.


According to the statement, the Government hopes to lower deficits to an average of 2.5 per cent over the next four years.

But Moody's notes the state will be challenged by "an increasing reliance on more volatile mining royalties".

Mining revenues are forecast to amount to nearly one quarter of WA's revenue by 2017/18, up from around 8 per cent in 2006/07.


"The state's assumption on royalties is underpinned by a fairly optimistic forecast for iron ore prices," the statement said.

Moody's said while the Government planned to cut spending, it would be difficult.

"The state will be hard pressed to meet its very low spending growth targets, unless the government's fiscal resolve strengthens and new measures are identified."


http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-08-25/wa-credit-rating-downgraded-by-moodys/5694...
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Q) What is the difference between Labor & Liberal Economics?
A) Stuff all, they both made an absolute hash of things over the last 30-40 years & they are still doing it!


Btw, whilst the above is going on in WA, the current Premier has embarked on on 2 huge $Billion + projects, which are basically his memorial projects.
Well, he will be remembered, BUT NOT AS SOMEONE WHO DID THE RIGHT THING FOR THE PUBLIC'S FUTURE!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1063 - Aug 30th, 2014 at 10:58am
 
When Do We Start Calling This 'The Greater Depression'?


...

...

We started by calling it the financial crisis of 2007. Then it became the financial crisis of 2008. Next it was the downturn of 2009-2009. By the middle of 2009 it was clearly the biggest thing since the 1930s, and acquired the name of "The Great Recession". By the end of 2009 the business cycle trough had been passed, and people breathed a sigh of relief: "The Great Recession" would be its stable name--we would not have to change its name again, and move on to labels containing the D-word.

But we breathed our sigh of relief too soon. Although politicians and their senior aides went on speaking tours playing up "recovery summer", the United States did not experience a rapid V-shaped recovery carrying it back to the previous growth trend of potential output. In this the post-2009 recovery was light-years different from the post-1982 recovery. Between the start of 2005 and the end of 2007 U.S. real GDP grew at 3.1%/year. The recession trough in 2009 saw the U.S. real GDP level 11% lower than the 2005-2007 trend. Today it stands 16% below.

Things have been even worse in Europe. The Eurozone experienced not recovery but renewed recession with a second-wave downturn starting in 2010--an event that shifted the consensus name of the current episode to "The Great Recession". Eurozone real GDP stood 8% below its 1995-2007 trend at the recession trough. It now stands 15% below.

Cumulative output losses relative to the 1995-2007 trends now stand at 78% of a year's GDP for the United States, and at 60% of a year's GDP for the Eurozone.

These magnitudes made me conclude at the start of 2011 that "The Great Recession" was no longer adequate: it was time to start calling this episode "The Lesser Depression".

In the Eurozone, the pretense that recovery was in train is now gone, and there is no way to read the financial markets other than as anticipating a Eurozone triple-dip recession. In the United States, the Federal Reserve under Janet Yellen has moved from wondering whether it will ever be appropriate to cease asset purchases and raise interest rates without a significant upturn in the employment share to ceasing asset purchases and wondering when it will raise interest rates--even without either a significant upturn in the employment share or a significant upward breakout in inflation.

A year and a half ago, when some of us were expecting a return to whatever the path of potential output was by 2017, our guess was that the Great Recession would wind up costing the North Atlantic in lost production about 80% of one year's output--call it $13 trillion. Today a five-year return to whatever the new normal might be looks optimistic--and even that scenario carries us to $20 trillion. And a pessimistic scenario of five years that have been like 2012-2014 plus then five years of recovery would get us to a total lost-wealth cost of $35 trillion.

At some point we will have to stop calling this thing "The Great Recession" or "The Lesser Depression" and start calling it "The Greater Depression". When?

http://seekingalpha.com/article/2459355-when-do-we-start-calling-this-the-greate...
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Don't believe what 99.9% of all Politicians, Central Bankers or Economists tell you, as they only tell you, WHAT THEY WANT TO HAPPEN, NOT WHAT IS LIKELY TO BECOME REALITY!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #1064 - Aug 30th, 2014 at 11:18am
 
A Big Summer Story You Missed: Soaring Oil Debt


Over 100 of the world's largest energy companies are running out of cash.

They are now spending more than they are earning. Profits have lagged as expenditures have risen. Overburdened by debt, these firms are selling assets.

The math is simple. The 127 firms generated $568 billion in cash from their operations during 2013-2014 while their expenses totalled $677 billion. To cover the difference of $110 billion, the energy giants increased their debt load or sold off assets.

Most companies are now investing in high-cost and high-risk projects to mine difficult hydrocarbons such as bitumen or shale oil, according to Carbon Tracker. Hydraulic fracturing, the land equivalent of ocean bottom trawling, adds to the cost of oil, too.

It's not only the firms deploing fracking that are racking up high debt loads. Chinese state-owned corporations, for example, plopped down $30 billion to develop junk crude in the oilsands over the last decade.

But with a few exceptions, none of the investments are making a good dollar return due to the difficult and costly nature of mining messy bitumen as well as problematic quality of the reserves, combined with huge cost overruns.

Most of the world's oil and gas firms are now pursuing extreme hydrocarbons because the cheap and easy stuff is gone. The high-carbon remainders include shale oil, oilsands, ultra deepwater oil and Arctic petroleum.


But given that oil demand in places like Europe, the United States and Japan is flattening or declining, many analysts don't think that high-carbon, high-risk projects (which all need a $75 to $95 market price for oil to break even) make much economic sense in a carbon-constrained world.

The capital costs for liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals supplied by heavily fracked coal or shale fields is also rising. Highly complex LNG projects in Norway, Australia and Papua New Guinea have all experienced major cost overruns.


Goldman Sachs now reckons more than half of the oil companies listed on the stock market -- are spending five times more than what they did in 2000 chasing extreme hydrocarbons. As a consequence they need an oil price of $120 a barrel to remain cash neutral in the future.
And whenever nations spend less on petroleum, like Europe and the U.S., there is stagnation.


But diminished returns from extreme hydrocarbons will do more than slow down productivity and increase price volatility. They will impose lasting and material adjustments on all of us.

In addition to seeing fewer vehicles on the road (a startling U.S. reality already), we shall also see lower wages (except in the hydrocarbon industry), rising food prices, rising personal debt loads, increased demands on governments increasingly short of revenue, explosive inequalities in wealth and rising political conflict.

We shall also see more of what the U.S. Energy Information Administration dutifully recorded:
soaring debt loads to support massive energy sprawl. That means industry will spend more good money chasing poor quality resources. They will inefficiently mine and frack ever larger land bases at higher environmental costs for lower energy returns.

Combined with its twin brother, climate change, this is the great energy narrative that will shape our destiny in the years to come.


Marion King Hubbert, a Shell geologist, predicted this development decades ago and presented the cultural conundrum clearly:
"During the last two centuries we have known nothing but an exponential growth culture, a culture so dependent upon the continuance of exponential growth for its stability that is incapable of reckoning with problems of non-growth."


But why would such a radical development be news in the dog days of summer?

http://www.resilience.org/stories/2014-08-29/a-big-summer-story-you-missed-soari...
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As I have said, Demographics, Energy & Climate Change are the 3 major factors, which are now influencing the Global Economy!


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