Feds’ Attempt to Bail Out Consumers with Tax Rebates
"One Rebate Not Enough," is the headline of an article written by Robert Shiller, appearing in the New York Times. Shiller says the feds' attempt to bail out consumers with tax rebates is too puny to do much good. Besides, he says, much of it ends up stimulating others peoples' economies.
You'll remember our explanation of the world money system. The Fed is no longer America's central bank. Now, it's the world's central bank. But it's a funny old world. The Fed provides money - currently at less than half the rate of consumer price inflation - in order to stimulate the economy. And it does stimulate the economy...the Chinese economy! And the Russian economy! And the Iranian economy (the fourth largest oil exporter in the world)! And the economies of every sandy oil producer in the Arab world!
So do the feds' 'tax rebates.' Americans spend the money on gasoline and other imports. Rebates were intended to be a "booster shot," for the U.S. economy, said President George W. Bush. But it's the foreigners, not Americans, who are getting the boost. The foreigners build sparkling cities. They throw up huge factories. They roll more automobiles off the assembly lines...build more railways...pave more highways.
Yes...and even store more food. Comes an article in today's International Herald Tribune that tells us the foreigners are "hoarding" food...and that his is pushing up food prices even more.
Meanwhile, in the U.S. of A., hearts break...and the lonely wind blows through empty houses.
Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning Australia
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About the Author
Best-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.
Comment by christina on 6 July 2008:
Why don't they give them all money instead to buy seeds and seedlinds and then make all the Americans plant vegetables in their gardens. Then that would help their country with the pain of high food prices. Heck, they all have a backyard, they may as well grow vegies in it instead of just using them to park their SUV's and keep their $1,000 exotic outdoor furniture sets in