Tag Archive | "globalization"
Posted on 20 April 2009. Tags: alternative investments, bank bailout, banking, banks, barack obama, bonds, budget, Bush administration, Cabinet, capitalism, Caterpillar, chairwoman, Citigroup, combines, congress, Crash Proof, credit crunch, credit spread, criminal, crisis, cut federal spending, debt, Deere & Co., deficit, democrat, department head, economic collapse, Economics, espionage, exports, farm equipment, federal, federal reserve, financial crisis, financial industry, financial system, fraud, free trade, freedom, globalization, government, Greed, guarantee, House Intelligence Committee, housing boom, imports, intervention, iron condors, Israel, Jane Harman, liberty, lobbyist, lobbyists, market insurance, market neutral, meltdown, MIT, monitor bailout program, municipal debt, National Security Agency, Neil Barofsky, NSA, obama, option, option strategy, peter schiff, Peter Schiff was right, Politics, power, President Obama, professor, protectionis, Putin, Real Estate, Rob Viglione, Russia, selling insurance, selling options, selling options for income, Simon Johnson, socialism, special investigator general, Spending, state, tariffs, TARP, too big to exist, trade, trading system, treasury bonds, Troubled Asset Relief Program, trucks, U.S. Treasury, unprecedented
Rep. Jane Harman exchanged favors for power-aided Israeli lobbyists accused of espionage, top government investigator says that bank bailouts are open to fraud, Obama tells Cabinet to cut spending by 0.02%, U.S. Treasury estimates it has lost $900 million of taxpayer money from holding $301 billion in Citigroup junk assets, Russian tariffs take toll on U.S. companies, and could the U.S. be headed for a Russian-style economic collapse circa 1998? Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 16 April 2009. Tags: Afghanistan, Al Qaeda, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, anti-American, assault weapons, Austin, barack obama, Bill of Rights, capitalism, Civil War, Columbian, congress, Constitution, construction, court warrant, crash, democrat, Diane Feinstein, dictator, domestic communications, downturn, drug prohibition, drug violence, eavesdropping, Economics, firearms, foreclosure, free enterprise, free trade, freedom, Freedom Watch, globalization, governor, guerrillas, gun trafficking, gun trafficking treaty, guns, high-speed trains, House of Representatives, housing, housing market, Hugo Chavez, human rights violantions, identity, illegal spying, illegal trafficking, indivisible, Jim Dunnam, Justice Department, Latin America, law enforcement, liberty, Mexico, militia, mystery donors, National Security Agency, new home starts, NSA, organization, passenger rail, patriot, Politics, porkulus, President Obama, ratification, Real Estate, recession, Rick Perry, right to bear arms, Rob Viglione, secession, second amendment, Senate, Senate intelligence committee, slump, socialism, South America, stabilizing, stimulus, Taliban, Tea Party, terrorism, Texas, treaty, union, universities, Venezuela, War on Drugs, wiretapping
President Obama pushes ratification of gun trafficking treaty, housing market continues to crash-new home starts down 11% and foreclosures jumping 17%, Senate to call panel to investigate illegal NSA domestic spying, Obama unveils plan to spend another $13 billion and build high speed trains (it’s a down payment), Democrats attack Texas Gov. Perry over secession comments at tea party, Freedom Watch sues dictator Hugo Chavez for acts of terrorism and human rights violations, and a bit of good news: mystery donors give $45 million to universities… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 13 April 2009. Tags: Al Pacino, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, auto manufacturers, bailout, banking, banks, barack obama, Ben Bernanke, Big Brother, bonds, borrow, budget deficit, capital, capitalism, Chairman, China, congress, consequences, consumer-backed securities, contraction, Credit, current account, debt, debt deflation, debt mania, declining rates, decomposing inflation, deflation, Detroit, Devil's Advocate, economic growth, economic output, Economics, Employment, exports, Fed, federal reserve, financial system, free enterprise, free trade, general price level, globalization, government, Great Unwinding, hedge fund bailout, Hoisington, House of Representatives, household worth, imports, inflation, institutions, interest rates, Investment management company, Japan, long-term interest rates, M1, M2, M3, Milton Friedman, money creation, money equation, money supply, mortgage bailout, Net Worth, Obamanomics, political capital, Politics, President Obama, prices, print money, printing presses, private capital, Real Estate, Rob Viglione, Senate, sin, socialism, spend, stock market, TARP, tax the rich, taxation, taxes, trade, treasuries, unemployment, vanity, velocity of money, wealth destruction
There are two colossal events occurring in the world right now: Private credit and wealth is being destroyed, and in its place a good deal of money is being created. Much is taking place behind the scenes, driving this epic showdown between natural forces pushing for a return to sustainable equilibrium pitted against the full arsenal of man’s capability to resist. Just as the fog of war can obscure a battlefield until the end, the outcome of this struggle is far from clear. Nonetheless, there are some telling events to note, signs for which to watch, and consequences to mull. Continue Reading
Posted in Economics, Investing, Politics
Posted on 04 April 2009. Tags: barack obama, Big Brother, bonds, borrow, budget, capitalism, central bank, class warfare, competition, competitive, currency, cut taxes, debt, depression, economic prosperity, Economics, expenditures, fiscal policy, free enterprise, free markets, free trade, globalization, government, government spending, growth, improving productivity, interest rates, John Key, laissez-fair, leftism, limit to what government can do, make country more productive, monetary policy, National, New Zealand, New Zealand dollar, Politics, populism, President Obama, prime minister, print money, productive, prop up growth, recession, redistribution, regulations, resources, Rob Viglione, socialism, spend, stimulus, taxation, taxes, trade, trader, transform the economy, Wall Street Journal, world leader, WSJ
New Zealand Prime Minister John Key speaks a strange language. It’s English, all right, even with an accent, but he is one of the only world leaders who is speaking of relaxing regulations, cutting taxes, spending within budget, and focusing on making his country more productive.
Rather than jumping on the tax, borrow, spend, print, populist bandwagon with nearly every other world leader, John Key’s solution to the tough times is to “use this time to transform the economy to make us stronger so that when the world starts growing again we can be running faster than other countries we compete with.”
Key’s idea is to grow the country out of recession by improving productivity, not simply catering to populist calls for wealth redistribution, stifling regulation, and growth-inhibiting class warfare taxes. He calls attempts to use debt and money printing to “prop up growth” risky, saying that saddling future generations with debt could be counterproductive. He is one of the only politicians who states “There is actually a limit to what governments can do.”
At a time when governments are growing by leaps and bounds, and everyone seems convinced that Big Brother holds the keys to economic prosperity, it is refreshing to see a world leader (actually an ex-currency trader) embrace sound economic principals.
Key admits that New Zealand will not pull the world out of recession; it’s too bad other leaders lack such humility!
Here’s a link to the Wall Street Journal interview with Key.
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Posted in Economics, Politics
Posted on 03 April 2009. Tags: accountability, Ahmad Tanveer, AIG, alternative economic data, america, American International Group, bail out the people, barack obama, Ben Bernanke, Big Brother, big businesses, bipartisanship, BLS, bonds, bonuses, bottomless pit, budge deficit, budget plan, Bureau of Labor Statistis, bureaucratic, capitalism must end, cato institute, chanting and drumming, collectivism, concentration camps, congress, debt, democrats, Department of Homeland Security, depression, detain immigrants, detention centers, developing world, development, development economics, DHS, economic systems, Economics, Economists' Adventures and misadventures in the tropics, employment obligations, end of American Empire, fair trade, Fannie Mae, fascism, federal reserve, financial regulations, fiscal year, FNM, FRE, Fredd Mac, free enterprise, free trade, G20, Georgia, global New Deal, Global Socialism, globalization, Goldman Sachs, Gordon Brown, Group of 20, harassed by government, Harry Reid, House of Representatives, Hugo Chavez, IMF, immigrant deaths, immigration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, ineffective, inherited mistakes, insurance, international aid organizations, International Monetary Fund, London, mortgage giants, mortgage market, Nancy Pelosi, new york protest, New York University, New Yorker, NYU, Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, Pakistani, Pax Americana, Politics, poor countries, President Obama, prisons, protectionism, quadrillion, real unemployment, recession, republicans, retention bonuses, Rob Viglione, Russia, secondary market, Senate, ShadowStats, socialism, spending bill, statistics, stimulus spending, summit, The Elusive Quest for Growth, The White Man's Burden, third world, Tim Geithner, trade credits, treasuries, trillion, troop withdrawals, unemployment, united states, unprecedented spending, utopia, Utopian aid plans, Venezuela, wasteful, why doesn't aid work, Why the West's Efforts to aid the rest have done so much ill and so little good, William Easterly, World Bank, world leaders
Government detention camps cover up deaths-does America have a human rights problem? Congress passes unprecedented $3.6 trillion budget with $1.2 trillion deficit, official unemployment rates his 8.5%-some economists claiming they are really upwards of 20%, government mortgage giants Fannie and Freddie to pay $159 billion in new bonuses, Obama calls end to ‘Pax Americana’, world leaders pledge $1.1 trillion to IMF, Russia refuses to remove troops from Georgia, NY protesters call for government to ‘Bail out the People’, Hugo Chavez declares that ‘Capitalism must end,’ and Treasuries drop with announcement of next week’s $59 billion note issue and Goldman Sachs estimate that government will need to borrow another $3.25 trillion this year… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire, Uncategorized
Posted on 28 March 2009. Tags: ACTA, Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, barack obama, Big Brother, computers, copyright, copyright infringement, counterfeiting, Executive Order 12958, free trade, freedom, globalization, law, liberty, media, Orwel, Orwellian, piracy, President Obama, privacy, Rob Viglione, spying, surveillance, trade agreement, White House
In the name of national security, the Obama administration is secretly drafting an international treaty that will give corporations and government sweeping powers to seize and search private computers and personal media.
When asked to disclose the treaty’s details, President Obama declared content of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) “classified in the interests of national security pursuant to Executive Order 12958.”
Scared about Big Brother? Worried about the chaos that could ensue if the dollar snaps and we hit a real economic crisis? In Emergency, Neil Strauss comes to the sobering realization that, even in America, anything can happen.
Rather than watch helplessly, he decided to do something about it. And so he spent three years traveling through a country that’s lost its sense of safety, equipping himself with the tools necessary to save himself and his loved ones from an uncertain future.
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Posted in Politics
Posted on 17 March 2009. Tags: abuse, abuse of power, africa, aircraft manufacturer, Argentina, arms race, barack obama, Britain, budget director, censorship, Charles Grassley, China, Christina Kirchner, Cold War, colleges, communications, congress, control, costs, dictatorship, Dmitri Medvedev, down payment, Economics, European, F-22 fighter, factory, fair trade, federal stimulus, flow of information, France, fraud, free trade, global trade, globalization, government services, governor, growing bureaucracy, Health Care, health reform, insurance, Intel, Iowa, labor unions, large-scale rearming, Lockheed Martin, Mark Sanford, nationalize, NATO, nuclear forces, nuclear powers, omnibus spending bill, Overstock, pay off debt, Peter Orszag, Politics, president, President Obama, protectionism, public debt, public safety, public schools, reality check, reciprocal trade war, republican, Rob Viglione, Russia, sanctions, security council, Senator, signing statement, socialism, South Carolina, state debt, stimulus funds, tariffs, taxes on overseas income, trade war, union power, United Nations, united states, veto rights, waste, whistle-blowers, White House
Obama rejects Gov. Sanford’s plan to use stimulus money to pay down South Carolina debt, Russia planning ‘large-scale’ rearming, Obama’s health care plans will cost at least $1.5 trillion, companies fight back against Obama’s economic plans saying they are hurtful, Obama tries to overrule Congress and stifle whistle-blowing, Argentina moves to nationalize factory owned by Lockheed Martin, and big changes stirrup up at the U.N…just the latest in your Freedom Under Fire Report! Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 16 March 2009. Tags: agricultural, AIG, america, American International Group, bailouts, barack obama, Barclay's, Barney Frank, Bernard Madoff, bonuses, bridges, capitalism, China, Chinese, Commerce, commercial trucking project, competitive, confiscate, congress, consumption, corporate welfare, counterparties, credit markets, Deutsche Bank, domestic investment, economic downturn, Economics, exports, fair trade, federal aid, federal court, federal prosecutors, fiscal policy, forfeiture, free enterprise, free trade, freedom, global trade, globalization, Goldman Sachs, GS, highways, House of Representatives, imports, industrial, infrastructure, Merrill Lynch, Mexico, migrant workers, obama, Politics, ports, President Obama, proscription, protectionism, R&D, reciprocal trade war, research and development, roads, Rob Viglione, Ruth Madoff, small businesses, small-business loans, socialism, socialism for the rich, Societe Generale, sovereign wealth fund, stimulus package, tariffs, trade war, Treasury Department, united states, victims, welfare, White House
The trade wars begin-Mexico raises tariffs on U.S. exports in retaliation of truck project cancellation, Obama angry at A.I.G. over bonuses-tries to cut them, small businesses to be next bailout beneficiaries, government tries to track down and confiscate Madoff assets-who will keep them? China uses global downturn to boost competitive advantages, Jon Stewart rips apart Jim Cramer in debate on poor financial reporting…just the latest in your Freedom Under Fire Report! Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 13 March 2009. Tags: agricultural commodities, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Andorra, Assemblyman, Austria, bank privacy, banking, barack obama, billionaire list, billions will die, British Petroleum, california, cell phone company, climate change, Commerce Department, Copenhagen, Corridor H, democrat, director, division of labor, drug cartel, drug prohibition, earth's population, Economics, El Chapo, exports, fair trade, federal taxpayers, Forbes, foreign trade, free trade, Germany, global warming, globalization, Hans Schellnhuber, imports, income tax, Internal Revenue Service, IRS, Joaquin Guzman Loera, keynesian policy, legalizing marijuana, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, milk and cream, nationalization, Norway, Norwegian, offshore banking, oligarchs, omnibus spenidng bill, porkulus, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, President Obama, road to nowhere, Rob Viglione, Robert Byrd, Russia, russian court, russian markets crash, seize foreign assets, Senator, socialism, stimulus bill, swiss banking, Switzerland, tax collectors, tax evasion, tax revenues, Telenor, theft, Tom Ammiano, trade balance, trade deficit, U.S. Census Bureau, Virginia, War on Drugs, West Virginia
The age of banking secrecy coming to an end, climate scientist warns that billions will die, U.S. trade deficit contracts along with trade, Russians steal yet another foreign company’s assets, Mexican drug lord makes Forbes’ billionaires list, road to nowhere to take 26 years and $1.5 billion, California considers legalizing marijuana…just the latest in your Freedom Under Fire report! Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 11 March 2009. Tags: Alan Greenspan, capitalism, congress, default rates, Department of Housing and Urban Development, Economics, Fannie Mae, Fed, federal funds rate, federal reserve, Freddie Mac, free enterprise, free trade, global trade, globalization, housing, HUD, interest rates, montary policy, mortage industry, mortgage rates, mortgages, Politics, protectionism, Real Estate, Rob Viglione, secondary market for mortgages, socialism, speculation, subprime borrowers, subprime lending
Former Federal Reserve Chairman, Alan Greenspan, published an editorial in the Wall Street Journal today that absolves himself of any wrong-doing in the housing bubble and its subsequent destructive aftermath. Latching onto a weak argument that circa 2002 long-term mortgage and short-term federal funds rates had statistically diverged in correlation, he suggests that the overcapitalization of housing resulting from cheap credit was not his fault. Many critics have pointed the finger at Greenspan for setting short-term rates too low for too long. Access to cheap credit, according to critics, sparked “irrational exuberance” in the housing market, flooding the sector with unprecedented capital and driving prices to ridiculous levels.
Rather, Greenspan blames global trade in boosting foreign savings rates and leaving the U.S. with large current account imbalances that were subsidized by our trading partners. The current account cash flows went almost exclusively into housing, driving long-term mortgage rates to unprecedented lows and encouraging speculation.
Hilariously, in his editorial Greenspan cites famous economist Milton Friedman as saying that during Greenspan’s tenure from 1985-2005, “There is no other period of comparable length in which the Federal Reserve System has performed so well. It is more than a difference of degree; it approaches a difference of kind.”
Friedman did not live to see the aftermath of Greenspan’s policies. Short-term federal funds and long-term mortgage rates did diverge in correlation, but they did so precisely because of Fed and other governmental policies. The structural distortions in our economy leading to sustained trade imbalances were caused by irresponsible monetary and fiscal policies. Congress legislated the creation of the secondary mortgage market, mandated that it funnel capital to subprime borrowers, and taxed away America’s industrial base. Couple this with a sustained period of negative real interest rates orchistrated by Greenspan, and the U.S. economy grew ridiculously distorted over time, channeling the world’s savings towards our consumption, leaving the country bereft of productive capacity. Housing is not productive, but consumptive.
Global trade is not the problem. Current account and trade deficits, of themselves, are not the problem. Artificial interest rate manipulation, social engineering legislation that drives consumption over production, and inflationary monetary policy that drives perpetual inflation and currency debasement are the issues.
Mr. Greenspan accuses his detractors of rewriting history, but that is precisely what he is attempting to do.
Posted in Economics, Politics