Post by jeffolie on Apr 14, 2009 18:02:23 GMT -6
I seems funny. You can almost watch the light bulb turning on in this well written Historian's mind. You can just imagine his thinking: oh, I get it now.
Monetizing usually leads to the destruction of the currency and the Dollar will be in jeopardy.
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They've already had quite a few interesting items over at Bloomberg this week and it's only Tuesday morning. Here's a commentary by Paul Kennedy, author of the must-read jaunt through history - The Rise and Fall of Great Powers. He fears for the U.S. dollar.
The third dog barking in the night was the dramatic news last month that the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (that is, on Fed chief Ben Bernanke’s instructions) would purchase as much as $300 billion of U.S. government debt and furthermore double its purchases of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac housing securities to an enormous $1.45 trillion. No wonder the Financial Times headline on the next morning read “Fed Purchase Plan Stuns Investors.”
Now I am not a professionally trained economist or banker, merely a historian of the reasons why Great Powers seem to have risen over time, and then steadily collapsed some generations later. Yet it appears to my non-scientific mind that if a particular national government decides on the one hand to issue more and more Treasury debt, and on the other hand to have its national bank purchase large amounts of the same, it runs a serious risk of scaring investors about its long-term credit- worthiness.
...
Heavens, it looks almost Madoffian! Just think about it. If you and I could issue a loan to our neighbor, then proceed to buy it before he even reaches for his wallet, what would the eventual value be down the street? What, the neighbor might ask, were we doing?
And they're just getting started...
themessthatgreenspanmade.blogspot.com/2009/04/kennedy-it-looks-almost-madoffian.html
Monetizing usually leads to the destruction of the currency and the Dollar will be in jeopardy.
==========================================================
They've already had quite a few interesting items over at Bloomberg this week and it's only Tuesday morning. Here's a commentary by Paul Kennedy, author of the must-read jaunt through history - The Rise and Fall of Great Powers. He fears for the U.S. dollar.
The third dog barking in the night was the dramatic news last month that the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (that is, on Fed chief Ben Bernanke’s instructions) would purchase as much as $300 billion of U.S. government debt and furthermore double its purchases of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac housing securities to an enormous $1.45 trillion. No wonder the Financial Times headline on the next morning read “Fed Purchase Plan Stuns Investors.”
Now I am not a professionally trained economist or banker, merely a historian of the reasons why Great Powers seem to have risen over time, and then steadily collapsed some generations later. Yet it appears to my non-scientific mind that if a particular national government decides on the one hand to issue more and more Treasury debt, and on the other hand to have its national bank purchase large amounts of the same, it runs a serious risk of scaring investors about its long-term credit- worthiness.
...
Heavens, it looks almost Madoffian! Just think about it. If you and I could issue a loan to our neighbor, then proceed to buy it before he even reaches for his wallet, what would the eventual value be down the street? What, the neighbor might ask, were we doing?
And they're just getting started...
themessthatgreenspanmade.blogspot.com/2009/04/kennedy-it-looks-almost-madoffian.html