04/05/2006
Its even mainstream now, from Yahoo
Don't worry, everthing will be OK, please go back to your sofa and put on the Nightly news. You'll see, they will tell you want you need to know to calm down. Oh look over there, BOOOOMM, damit its alqida...whatch out over there!!!
Gold is at a thirty year high...HMMM
InvestmentU.com: Seven Trends Spell A U.S. Financial Crisis
Tuesday April 4, 5:20 am ET
"The basis of my remark," says Skousen, "is a warning issued by none other than former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker. A year ago he warned that 'The U.S. is skating on increasingly thin ice... The circumstances seem to me as dangerous and intractable as any I can remember, and I can remember a lot.'"
Whether that thin ice breaks, cracks or holds, says Skousen, depends on seven trends that are driving the U.S. economy. "It's a medley of economic woes," he says, that include:
-- An overreacting Fed, switching from "easy money" to "tight money." The
Fed has been a major source of instability in the financial system. For
example, Greenspan was chairman for 19 years, and switched policies seven
times! The Fed often overshot its target on both ends - raising interest
rates too high in 1989, 1994, and now, and pushing them too low in 1992
and 2003.
-- Inflation and structural imbalances. The Fed's "easy money" policy
caused in part the "irrational exuberance" of the tech stock market bubble
in the late 1990s and the real estate bubble in this decade. When the
bubble bursts, as it inevitably must, the effects aren't pretty.
-- Poor consumer/investor finances. Our government policies promote
overspending and undersaving on a massive scale. The saving rate has
turned negative, and household debt as a percentage of disposable income
is at a dangerous level, exceeding 150%. (See chart below.)
http://www.investmentu.com/bin/q/c/householddebt.bmp
-- A vulnerable financial/banking system. We live in a global
laissez-faire financial system that is highly leveraged with debt
financing, derivatives and fractional reserve banking. Hedge funds are
not really "hedged," but highly speculative, and another collapse along
the lines of Long-Term Capital Management in 1997 could be disastrous.
-- Trade deficits and out-of-balance capital flows. The trade deficit is
at record levels. To make up this imbalance, foreigners must invest
$2 billion a day in the U.S.
-- Overburdened federal debt levels, unfunded liabilities and rising
interest rates. The Senate just raised the national debt ceiling to
$9 trillion, representing 70% of GDP. Interest expense is now the
third-largest category of the federal budget, only exceeded by defense
spending and domestic welfare expenditures. Imagine the impact as
interest rates start climbing again.
-- The rising cost of war/natural disasters. Last year, we faced a large
jump in the deficit as a result of the rising costs of the war in Iraq and
the expenses related to the Gulf hurricanes.
"It's easy to get carried away with disaster scenarios," says Skousen. "Don't ignore the fact that the stock market is currently at a four-year high. The single indicator I use to monitor global instability is the price of gold. If it spikes upward, we're in trouble."
Dr. Mark Skousen is an economist who has taught finance and economics at Columbia Business School, Barnard College at Columbia University, and Rollins College in Winter Park, FL. He recently was nominated Chairman of Investment U, and editor of the organization's free educational financial e-letter with more than 275,000 subscribers.
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