This discussion about Emerging Markets is essentially one of analyzing the risks you wish to take and the ones you don’t. If you were a young, heterosexual male, for example, you might be willing to risk missing a new episode of The Simpsons to risk going on a date with Megan Fox.
September 23rd, 2010 | Eric J. Fry | 0 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "welfare"
Faith in the Gold-Dow Ratio
Strikes make travel tough today – in both London and Paris. The unions have called for massive snarl-ups to protest governments’ efforts to bring spending under control. The subways aren’t running. Trains are halted. The French leftist newspaper, Liberation, says that “millions are expected to take to the streets.”
September 8th, 2010 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
The “Road to Serfdom”
The US government is pursuing the same misguided strategy that has failed for twenty years to revive Japan’s economy. This strategy consists of squandering taxpayer dollars on failed financial institutions, and prop up unaffordable federal and state spending programs. One key difference: Japan’s competitive export-oriented manufacturing base was…
August 11th, 2010 | Dan Amoss | 3 comments | Continued
The State the Welfare State is In
“You can take your loans and shove them,” the Hungarian economic minister, György Matolcsy, did not say. But that’s what he was thinking. Watch out. The Hungarians are trendsetters. They ran a budget deficit of 9% of GDP back in 2006. They got a $20 billion bailout in 2008 and have been living with austerity measures ever since…
July 26th, 2010 | Bill Bonner | 50 comments | Continued
Public Works Done Right
John Maynard Keynes once argued that, in a depression, it would be worthwhile to pay workers to dig holes, and to pay other workers to fill them up. But, as Nathan Lewis points out, below, when short-term “stimulus” becomes the focus, the effect is more likely to be short-term welfare. Read on…
February 19th, 2009 | Nathan Lewis | 7 comments | Continued


