Even before debt became such a big problem, real growth had already begun to disappear from the developed world. There has been none in Japan for the last 20 years…and almost no real growth in the US private sector for the last 10 years. In Europe, grosso modo, the story is similar.
January 18th, 2012 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "EU"
The War Against the Euro
The Americans are trying to discredit the euro in order to perpetuate dollar hegemony, so goes the argument. Hmm. It’s possible. It’s also possible that all central bankers and monetary policy makers are singing from the same hymnal. Their answer to the end of the credit bubble is to try and pump it back up with currency debasement. In that case, this is a war of all against all.
January 18th, 2012 | Dan Denning | 5 comments | Continued
Downgrade of European Financial Stability Facility Becomes a Reality
“It won’t be long before the EFSF has its own credit rating cut,” we wrote yesterday. And it wasn’t! Standard and Poor’s delivered the coup de grace yesterday. It downgraded the European Financial Stability Facility from AAA to AA+.
January 17th, 2012 | Dan Denning | 2 comments | Continued
Europe’s Flawed Financial Transactions Tax (FTT)
Europe’s Financial Transactions Tax (FTT) may disincentivise financial transactions by adding to their marginal cost. But as long as the supply of credit and cheap money to the banking system remains abundant, the banks have an open invitation to speculate.
January 10th, 2012 | Dan Denning | 3 comments | Continued
Nero, Bonaparte and Hitler Walk Into an Economic Union
The latest news out of Europe is that British Prime Minister Churchill Cameron refused to surrender sovereignty to the rest of the EU. Those on the continent have tied themselves to the Euro like tree huggers saving the forest.
The Deeper the Greek are in Debt
“Hooray” for democracy.
From out of the blue, Greek president George Papandreou has called a referendum on the Greek debt situation and whether Greece should accept the terms of the financial and political surrender imposed on it by the “Troika” of interventionists from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the European Union (EU), and the European Central Bank (ECB).
November 2nd, 2011 | Dan Denning | 3 comments | Continued
The Sovereign Debt Disaster
The problem is not just the current debt levels of these nations, because the deficits in all the countries are rising. Tax revenues are collapsing at the same time…
February 24th, 2010 | Egon von Greyerz | 2 comments | Continued
Government Sachs
In it were no crying widows and no shivering orphans. Just one very satisfied Lloyd Blankfein, chief executive of Goldman Sachs. He had sold the Greeks their debt, said the papers; now he has sold it short.
February 22nd, 2010 | Bill Bonner | 3 comments | Continued
U.S. Government Must Roll Over $3.4 Trillion in Debt Over Next Four Years
And if America can’t find anyone willing to finance its deficits, what then? Well, the luxury of issuing debts in the currency you also print is that you can print money to pay for them. Technically, you can never become insolvent when you enjoy this privilege. The Fed, for example, can create new money to buy debt issued by the Treasury, funding deficits ad infinitum.
November 3rd, 2009 | Dan Denning | 5 comments | Continued
A Recovery of Some Kind in Global Trade
“Global trade rose at its fastest rate in more than five years in July,” The Financial Times reports, “suggesting the economic recovery is feeding through into commerce.”
September 30th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 1 comment | Continued


