In The Monthly, Rudd plants a Neo-Marxist flag in the ground of the current debate with the kind of jargon-laden elitist preening that makes academic critics of the free market (who’ve never spent a day in the business world creating value) so nauseating. (…)Why not proclaim, since he is apparently in the position to make such proclamations, that the experiment in paper money and the deliberate policy of inflation it implies is theft?…
February 2nd, 2009 | Dan Denning | 21 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "bad bank"
The Collapse of Complex Asset Values
In the name of “stimulus” and “recovery” and to supposedly correct the excesses of the market, none of the normal free market mechanisms to punish the excesses are being allowed to function. Instead of acknowledging that markets work in boom/bust cycles of progress, excess, and consolidation, today’s generation of policy leaders want to eliminate cycles to preserve their fictitious wealth and power!…
January 29th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 7 comments | Continued
The Coming Oil Back Draft
During the big run up to $150, national oil companies were cash cows. But it now appears that little of the oil bounty was reinvested in new production or even maintenance of existing production. So what do we have now? We have a situation here. A situation where the falling oil price is leading a big reduction in oil production. This will match, for a while reduced demand for oil. But we also think it’s baiting the trap for a huge blowback in oil prices. And the spark for that could be geopolitical…
January 19th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 1 comment | Continued
The Baddest Bank in the West
The world’s full of bad banks already – banks that did just what Bernanke is proposing to do; they bought financial assets, notably mortgage market derivatives, for cash. Now, they turn to the taxpayer, desperate for a handout to keep them from going under. And the baddest bank of all? Next to the Central Bank of Zimbabwe it’s the U.S. Fed…
January 15th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 2 comments | Continued
