Posts Tagged “Depression Era”
Posted by: in Home Mortgage Online, tags: Basic Assumptions, Conservatism, Consistency, Depression Era, Economist, Excerpt, Financial Planning, Financial Security, Inconsistency, Investing, John Keynes, John Maynard Keynes, Money, People, Random, Risk, True Nature, World Turned Upside Down
Random Feed wrote an interesting post today on Here’s a quick excerpt In a world turned upside down, you must re-examine some basic assumptions. A good place to start: understanding the true nature of risk.John Maynard Keynes, the Depression-era economist who’s having quite the comeback, once quipped when he was accused of inconsistency: “When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?”Money has long advocated the benefits of consistency in your investing and financial planning. People who swing between bold risk taking and neurotic conservatism almo
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Posted by: in Home Mortgage Online, tags: Assets, Banking System, Ben Bernanke, Bust, Consumer Spending, Depression Era, Excerpt, Fed Chairman, Hard Decisions, Magnitude, Random, Securitization, Stimulus, Trillion, Wholesale
Random Feed wrote an interesting post today on Here’s a quick excerpt The financial system has effectively melted down. The wholesale credit system (securitization) is frozen, the banking system is dysfunctional and insolvent, and consumer spending has tanked. The Fed’s multi-trillion dollar lending facilities and monetary stimulus have kept the financial system from grinding to a halt, but the underlying problems still persist. Fed chairman Ben Bernanke has chosen to avoid the hard decisions and keep the price of toxic assets artificially high with the help of a
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Posted by: in Home Mortgage Online, tags: Bust, Depression Era, Different Story, Driven, Excerpt, Financial Crises, Inventories, Magnitude, Mike Whitney, Mismatch, Overcapacity, Precipitate, Random, Recession, Recessions, Severe Depression
Random Feed wrote an interesting post today on Here’s a quick excerpt By: Mike Whitney Jul 04, 2009 There’s a big difference between inventory-driven recessions and credit-driven recessions. An inventory recession is caused by a mismatch between supply and demand. It’s the result of overcapacity and under-utilization which can only work itself out over time as inventories are pared back and demand builds. Credit-driven recessions are a different story altogether. They typically last twice as long as and can precipitate financial crises. The current recession i
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