I don't see how they can. In 1980, America was the largest world creditor. Now it is the world's largest debtor.
People are living off debt now. The Chinese and Japanese own several trillion of the US debt, and they receive taxes in interest payments ($500 billion a year just in interest alone).
There are unfunded liabilities for SS and Medicare that total over $50 trillion. That money has also been raided and spent already.
You should Google "David Walker GAO Tour"
That's propaganda. They might make a nominal profit. Like how $0.03 in 1913 buys what costs $1 now. Do we really believe that a loaf of bread is 30 times more expensive to make today?
They might make money but adjusted for inflation, it will be a loss. It is impossible to convert bad debt and foreclosure into good debt, just as it is impossible to convert lead into gold.
Someone give me a link if you can as I'm off to do some homework on economic trends through some of guerilla links.
Well, I must say, by the time I get tired of renting and buy a house somewhere, the market is gonna be pretty sweet!
The market is not at bottom. Don't think the government is going to print up $700 billion and give it to Wall Street (not the people with mortgages to pay) and the market will pick up in price.So your waiting for price increases to buy your house? Smart!
That article was idiotic. They did not HAVE to be bailed out. If there was any value in their assets, the market would have bought them at fair value.you're all missing the boat here...
this mess is because of derivatives...
Web of Debt - IT’S THE DERIVATIVES, STUPID! WHY FANNIE, FREDDIE AND AIG ALL HAD TO BE BAILED OUT
They did not HAVE to be bailed out. If there was any value in their assets, the market would have bought them at fair value.
The issue is, these companies are nearly worthless.
I also agree that they should have let these companies fail and be auctioned off... but I understand the reason they won't allow that...
Erect and LotsofZeros here is a link you should read if you are into researching the problem. Its rather lengthy but well worth the read. Scroll down when it appears to go blank.
Taki’s Magazine, edited by Taki Theodoracopulos
Regulation is in some markets and industries very important. It is not an ex post facto law by definition or practice. It does not necesarily go back into the past and regualte those times. That is what ex post facto means.Hopefully, you will be able to move beyond this. Regulation is always ex post-facto. It doesn't stop problems, it just tries to prevent them from happening twice. And even at that, it fails.
Look at the drug war. I think Nixon said it would be won by '74 or '76. How is that going? The FDA? Helps drive up the price of medications, and limits availability to needed experimental drugs. Also is starting to interfere with (cheap) natural product medicine.
Regulation and bailouts are socialism for the rich. Who do you think writes Chris Dodd's legislation? It's a known fact that his lobbyists write it for him, and he just puts his name to it.
The market is the sword of damocles over the heads of would be monopolists and rip off artists. What the government does with regulation, is convince you that if you let them hold the sword, they will drop it at the right time, but when the right time comes, they convince you to give a reprieve (bailout).
Right, but that's the issue. They have constructed a game where if several fail, all fail, so it means that an entire segment of the global economy is allowed to play a game of no-lose capitalism that is subsidized by everyone else.the government isn't just rewarding big players here... and the government sure as hell doesn't care much enough about the mortgage market to drop a trillion dollars on it... what the government is trying to do is keep the derivatives market from melting down which would force a massive global deleveraging/liquidation on a scale never before seen...
Right. It's not just capitalism, it's free market economics. You have to allow cause and effect to play out. What's happening now, is moral hazard. The effect is being transferred onto people who had little or nothing to do with the failure. In every other aspect of our lives, we would consider such actions unacceptable.As stated before, I tend to lean more towards the pure capitalist ideals: If they can't afford it, they don't get the loan. I don't care what color they are. Let the banks decide what is a good risk for their lending standards and keep the government out of it. The government pressure to loan to unqualified purchasers has backfired immensely and we will all pay for that. My taxes will go to bail out Fannie, Freddie and others, the inflation is going to kill me at the grocery store (see devaluation of the dollar when we keep printing 'funny money'), and the house I own is now most likely worth less than when I purchased it due to the ever-softer real estate market (see 'appraisal comparable sales' and vacant houses).
Sorry, I meant that regulation is not ex post facto, it cannot fix what has happened. My bad.Regulation is in some markets and industries very important. It is not an ex post facto law by definition or practice. It does not necesarily go back into the past and regualte those times. That is what ex post facto means.
Monopolies only exist where there is no competition. The best way to limit competition, is to regulate an industry. Regulation always raises the price of entry, making it more costly for small players to emerge and challenge an established order. That is why most regulation is actually written by the industry, and not consumers or legislators. It's more profitable to limit competition through regulation (bang for the buck) than to compete in an open and free market.Not all regulations are bad. Enron is an example of what can happen when regualtions are taken off. Also the utility prices for electricity and gas service in developing areas like South America. When someone wants regulations taken off be very afraid. Look into who they are and why they want it. Usually it is not market oriented and is basically subjecting people to a monopoly on something they cant live without.
More competition equals price gouging and worse service? This is counter-intuitive. I think we all know that more competition leads to innovation, product and service improvements and lower prices.When the regulations are removed instead of lower prices and competition often there is price gouging and worse service.
Now that is very true. Unfortunately, you can't vote them all out. The lobbyists have more money than you. Incumbents are rarely defeated, and the two party duopoly will not allow outside challenges.The whole system is corrupt as shit and that is why we are getting fucked no matter where we run. Vote them all out.
Ron Paul's idea is better. Follow the Constitution. Then there is little money or power in Washington, and lobbyists have to lobby either 50 states, or 500 cities or 300 million consumers.There needs to be changes to the campaign finance and lobbyist laws so that special interests dont run DC.
Monopolies only exist where there is no competition. The best way to limit competition, is to regulate an industry. Regulation always raises the price of entry, making it more costly for small players to emerge and challenge an established order. That is why most regulation is actually written by the industry, and not consumers or legislators. It's more profitable to limit competition through regulation (bang for the buck) than to compete in an open and free market.
Think about this. It's true.
Imagine how many fewer offers and products there would be if AM was regulated. Consider how many fewer AMs there would be if they had to get a license and perform industry specific reporting on their tactics for government oversight.
I'm sure one could make the argument, but the industry would be safer and there would be less dirtbags and shady (no offense xmcp123) characters.
Perhaps. But at the cost of lower payouts (because the affiliate companies would have to hire staff to meet regulatory paperwork expectations, and potentially limit the number of programs they carry), more challenging entry into the industry, and rules that limit ways to generate leads?
Intervention has costs. If you believe in a free market (and I do), then you want the market to regulate, based upon consumer choices. It's the most efficient and moral model.
More competition equals price gouging and worse service? This is counter-intuitive. I think we all know that more competition leads to innovation, product and service improvements and lower prices.
What you're repeating are fallacies that a lot of people seem to believe, but have no rational basis to believe. Normally, as soon as people bring up natural monopolies and such, my first instinct is to say, "show me one" but these days, I just shutdown on the conversation, because it's hard to argue rationally with people who repeat things without having thought them through themselves.
So you're saying that in an industry where there is no competition, we are going to regulate it into a monopoly?I just think some industries should be regulated where there is a history of no one providing a real competitor.
Can you imagine having multiple phone companies? Multiple cable companies? Oh wait, Cell Phones and Satellite TV.Can you imagine your house having 5 power lines running up to it and you go unhook one and hook up another? How much would the waste be from extra lines or extra switching/metering devices?