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	<title>Comments on: The Daily Reckoning Australia Day Special Edition</title>
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	<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/</link>
	<description>An independent perspective on the Australian and global investment markets</description>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Ross</title>
		<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/comment-page-1/#comment-63178</link>
		<dc:creator>Ross</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2009 09:03:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/?p=4892#comment-63178</guid>
		<description>Oops I&#039;ve been told that I implied they were your banking mates, not so.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Oops I've been told that I implied they were your banking mates, not so.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Ross</title>
		<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/comment-page-1/#comment-63175</link>
		<dc:creator>Ross</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2009 08:53:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/?p=4892#comment-63175</guid>
		<description>So I&#039;m a brain dead bolshie now am I Bill?  I thought that was your Argentinian mate?  Or was he the crony capitalist?  Nationalisation was and is inevitable, I go with Andrew Mellon but liquidation has to be practical.  The good bank-bad bank rouse is just another desperate fling to save as many of your crony mates as you can for as long as you can and they will totally over estimate what could be called good assets (meaning just more bail out after bail out).   Any nationalised banks must be refloated quicker than.  Underwater borrowers should be directly subsidised by way of mortagage payment co-contribution for the life of the loan and given a penalised exit possibility.  They should be bound to the consequences of their bad decisions but not enslaved to it.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So I'm a brain dead bolshie now am I Bill?  I thought that was your Argentinian mate?  Or was he the crony capitalist?  Nationalisation was and is inevitable, I go with Andrew Mellon but liquidation has to be practical.  The good bank-bad bank rouse is just another desperate fling to save as many of your crony mates as you can for as long as you can and they will totally over estimate what could be called good assets (meaning just more bail out after bail out).   Any nationalised banks must be refloated quicker than.  Underwater borrowers should be directly subsidised by way of mortagage payment co-contribution for the life of the loan and given a penalised exit possibility.  They should be bound to the consequences of their bad decisions but not enslaved to it.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: fiscalferret</title>
		<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/comment-page-1/#comment-63077</link>
		<dc:creator>fiscalferret</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2009 00:49:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/?p=4892#comment-63077</guid>
		<description>my sympathies, i too had a computer which spat out such gobbledegook
- turns out it was a religious virus, had to re-format my hard drive.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>my sympathies, i too had a computer which spat out such gobbledegook<br />
- turns out it was a religious virus, had to re-format my hard drive.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Paul Tredgett</title>
		<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/comment-page-1/#comment-62847</link>
		<dc:creator>Paul Tredgett</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2009 12:59:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/?p=4892#comment-62847</guid>
		<description>Gotcha.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Gotcha.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Gerry</title>
		<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/comment-page-1/#comment-62841</link>
		<dc:creator>Gerry</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2009 11:37:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/?p=4892#comment-62841</guid>
		<description>Paul...Don&#039;t ask him any more questions...Please mate no more encouragement</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Paul...Don't ask him any more questions...Please mate no more encouragement</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: watcher7</title>
		<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/comment-page-1/#comment-62828</link>
		<dc:creator>watcher7</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2009 08:25:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/?p=4892#comment-62828</guid>
		<description>James Dale Davidson &amp; William Rees-Mogg wrote in their book &quot;The Great Reckoning&quot;, at the end of the introduction chapter that:

“... from what we understand of economic history, it would be startling if we were able to accurately gauge details of time and place in advance of the actual event. Our claims are more modest. We simply believe that it is possible to anticipate events rather than merely react to them. Lessons to this effect have been driven home since the earliest days of human interaction.

“The book of Genesis tells the story of Joseph. By listening to Joseph’s hint, the Pharaoh rightly anticipated the seven leans years that followed seven years of plenty. From this date to this, it has always been true that the future belongs to those who prepared for it” (Revised Edition, p.50).

Future Watch, informed by Bible prophecy, tries to inform, so that people may be better prepared to deal with the future from both a secular and spiritual point of view.

FW tries to present a secular perspective, to supplement the Biblical view, for those who are not yet, or never will be, or perhaps, until it is to late, ready to accommodate the latter view.

The post “Patterns of the past for the future” was put together on Australia day, which we know commemorates the beginning of Anglo-Celtic settlement of Australia.

FW argues from secular sources and from Bible prophecy that the Anglo-Celtic peoples will be defeated in WW3 and that those who survive the invasion will be deported from their homelands and will suffer terribly in exile. (The imperial Japanese Water Purification Unit 731 provides a glimpse of the future for many Australians).

Because of personal and national sins God is going to defeat and spew the Anglo-Celtic people put of Australia.

So the post’s point of view was to present a possible scenario that will lead up to WW3 so that those who have eyes to see may respond and prepare as they see things moving towatds war.

As God brought back the remnant of his people from Babylonian captivity God will rescue the remnant of the Anglo-Celtic peoples from a future captivity and will bless them even more than they have been blessed over the last two hundred or so years.

If you say it can’t happen it may be good to reflect on what Winston Churchill wrote in 1924 concerning “the utter impossibility of war with Japan”:

“I do not believe there is the slightest chance of it in our lifetime. The Japanese are our allies... She has no reason whatever to come into collision with us... war with Japan is not a possibility which any reasonable government need take into account” (quoted by Paul Johnson, Modern Times, (London: Orion Books, 1994), p.175).

&quot;History is littered with wars which everybody knew would never happen&quot; - Enoch Powell</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>James Dale Davidson &amp; William Rees-Mogg wrote in their book "The Great Reckoning", at the end of the introduction chapter that:</p>
<p>“... from what we understand of economic history, it would be startling if we were able to accurately gauge details of time and place in advance of the actual event. Our claims are more modest. We simply believe that it is possible to anticipate events rather than merely react to them. Lessons to this effect have been driven home since the earliest days of human interaction.</p>
<p>“The book of Genesis tells the story of Joseph. By listening to Joseph’s hint, the Pharaoh rightly anticipated the seven leans years that followed seven years of plenty. From this date to this, it has always been true that the future belongs to those who prepared for it” (Revised Edition, p.50).</p>
<p>Future Watch, informed by Bible prophecy, tries to inform, so that people may be better prepared to deal with the future from both a secular and spiritual point of view.</p>
<p>FW tries to present a secular perspective, to supplement the Biblical view, for those who are not yet, or never will be, or perhaps, until it is to late, ready to accommodate the latter view.</p>
<p>The post “Patterns of the past for the future” was put together on Australia day, which we know commemorates the beginning of Anglo-Celtic settlement of Australia.</p>
<p>FW argues from secular sources and from Bible prophecy that the Anglo-Celtic peoples will be defeated in WW3 and that those who survive the invasion will be deported from their homelands and will suffer terribly in exile. (The imperial Japanese Water Purification Unit 731 provides a glimpse of the future for many Australians).</p>
<p>Because of personal and national sins God is going to defeat and spew the Anglo-Celtic people put of Australia.</p>
<p>So the post’s point of view was to present a possible scenario that will lead up to WW3 so that those who have eyes to see may respond and prepare as they see things moving towatds war.</p>
<p>As God brought back the remnant of his people from Babylonian captivity God will rescue the remnant of the Anglo-Celtic peoples from a future captivity and will bless them even more than they have been blessed over the last two hundred or so years.</p>
<p>If you say it can’t happen it may be good to reflect on what Winston Churchill wrote in 1924 concerning “the utter impossibility of war with Japan”:</p>
<p>“I do not believe there is the slightest chance of it in our lifetime. The Japanese are our allies... She has no reason whatever to come into collision with us... war with Japan is not a possibility which any reasonable government need take into account” (quoted by Paul Johnson, Modern Times, (London: Orion Books, 1994), p.175).</p>
<p>"History is littered with wars which everybody knew would never happen" - Enoch Powell</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Paul Tredgett</title>
		<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/comment-page-1/#comment-62818</link>
		<dc:creator>Paul Tredgett</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2009 05:52:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/?p=4892#comment-62818</guid>
		<description>WoW watcher7, you covered a lot of ground there!
And the point was........?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>WoW watcher7, you covered a lot of ground there!<br />
And the point was........?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: watcher7</title>
		<link>http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-daily-reckoning-australia-day-special-edition/2009/01/26/comment-page-1/#comment-62815</link>
		<dc:creator>watcher7</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2009 05:03:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/?p=4892#comment-62815</guid>
		<description>Patterns of the past for the future

&quot;We are entering an era where it is now politically acceptable to avoid recessions and higher unemployment by doing the exact things that created these economic problems to begin with&quot; (Kenneth J. Gerbino, Coconuts and Gold, 321gold.com, January 26, 2009). 

To see how this latest new era is likely to play out, comments from a research paper form the foundation of a template to view the future:

&quot;It is common to associate the origins of the Great Stagflation of the 1970s with the two major oil price increases of 1973/74 and 1979/80. This paper argues that oil price increases were not nearly as essential a part of the causal mechanism generating stagflation as is often thought. We provide a model that can explain the bulk of stagflation by monetary expansions and contractions without reference to supply shocks... The oil supply shock view also fails to explain the dramatic surge in the price of other industrial commodities that preceded the 1973/74 oil price increase and the fact that increases in industrial commodity prices lead oil price increases in the OPEC period. (Abstract).

&quot;The two most prominent increases in the price of oil in 1973/74 and 1979/80 were both preceded by periods of unusually low real interest rates ... and economic expansion. (p.26).

&quot;The monetary model of stagflation ... relies on some initial monetary expansion to induce the countercyclical movements in output and inflation. A first test of the model is to verify that the two main episodes of global &quot;stagflation&quot; in 1973/74 and 1979/80 were indeed preceded by unusually large increases in world excess money supply...One indicator of liquidity is world money growth...

&quot;Figure 2a shows a sharp increase in world money growth in 1971-72 and in 1977-78 preceding the two primary stagflationary episodes... The increase in world money growth is followed by an unprecedented rise in world price inflation in 1973-74 and in 1979-80...
													
&quot;We now turn to the United States where the monetary expansions of the 1970s originated. Figure 3 shows that U.S. liquidity followed a pattern similar to that of other industrial countries.

&quot;Figure 3a shows two unprecedented spikes in money growth in 1971-1972 and in 1975-1977 that
preceded two episodes of unusually high deflator inflation in 1974 and in 1980 ... and that coincided with two episodes of significantly negative growth in real money balances in 1973-74 and 1978-1980...

&quot;Additional evidence of excess liquidity in the 1970s is provided by the U.S. real interest rate. Figure 3d shows that 1972-76 and 1976-80 were periods of abnormally low real interest rates... the timing of the 1973/74 and 1979/80 oil price increases coincided with a sharp rise in real interest rates. For that reason we conclude that the likely source of the low real interest rates observed in the 1970s is the preceding monetary expansion...

&quot;The Bernanke-Blinder index based on the Federal Funds rate shows a strongly expansionary stance from mid-1970 to the end of 1972... The contractionary response of the Fed in 1973 to the inflationary pressures set in motion by earlier Fed policy is a key element of our monetary explanation of stagflation...

&quot;As the U.S. economy slid into recession in 1974, the Fed again reversed course to ward off an even deeper recession. Indicators show a renewed monetary expansion that lasted into the late 1970s. The Bernanke-Blinder index from late 1974 into 1977 indicates that monetary policy was strongly expansionary. This expansion was not reflected in high inflation initially, consistent with a partial rebuilding of real balances ... and the well-documented fact that inflation only occurs with a delay (see Nelson 1998)... Around 1978, the monetary stance turned slightly contractionary, becoming strongly contractionary in late 1979 and early 1980 under Paul Volcker, as inflation continued to worsen. Once again, the monetary policy stance provides an alternative explanation for the genesis of stagflation&quot; (Robert B. Barsky, University of Michigan, NBER, and Lutz Kilian, University of Michigan CEPR, A Monetary Explanation of the Great Stagflation of the 1970s, fordschool.umich.edu/rsie/workingpapers/Papers451-475/r452.pdf, January 27, 2000).

Mark Twain, it is said, noted that history rhymes. So when comparing rhymes, where they occur in the inflation/deflation longwave cycle needs to be taken into consideration.

So in this war/peace influenced cycle, in the Cold War period consumer price inflation is primary and asset price inflation is secondary while in the post-Cold War period asset price inflation is primary and consumer price is secondary. In the former the crisis concerns inflation; and in the latter the crisis concerns deflation - credit crunch/decrease in money supply leading to asset price deflation.

This article argues that the pattern of events of the 1970s/80s, informed by the above consideration, provides a template to view the 2000s/2010s.

Trade provides a starting comparison.

Trade - early-1970 &amp; mid-2000s

&quot;After four years of 4.9% average growth in world GDP over the 2003-06 interval, the IMF is projecting two more years of the same...

&quot;The IMF has calculated its official estimates of world GDP as measured on a purchasing power parity basis back to 1970. Over this 37-year history, there is only one four-year growth spurt that is stronger than that of 2003-06 - the 5.4% average annual growth outcome for 1970-73. Unlike the current IMF forecast, which calls for another two years of boom-like conditions, the four-year growth surge of the early 1970s was followed by a sharp recession in the global economy, with average gains of just 2.3% over the 1974-75 period&quot; (Stephen Roach, Rosy Goes Global, morganstanley.com, April 13, 2007).

Australia benefited from trade in the early 1970s and followed the pattern of the research paper.

&quot;Australia&#039;s position in the global economy appeared to improve significantly in the early 1970s. Strong economic growth in the industrial nations drove up international demand for primary products, pushing their prices to record levels and Australia&#039;s exports boomed. The world economy was shaken by the dramatic oil price rises in 1972 and 1973, but Australia seemed better placed than most of the OECD in that it was ... and its coal exports made it a net energy exporter. Australia&#039;s exports earnings were so great in 1972 and 1973 that they produced an overall current account balance of payments surplus, a rare occurrence...

&quot;The Long Boom came to an end in 1974 when the industrial economies entered a severe recession that impacted one on the other. The economic indicators of the period were reversed: ... economic growth declined and unemployment increased...

&quot;Weak recovery from the 1974-75 world recession occurred from 1976 and continued to 1980...

&quot;There was a brief upswing in the world economy at the end of the 1970s as the industrial countries expanded output. Demand for primary products recovered and Australia&#039;s terms of trade improved...&quot;  (David Meredith &amp; Barrie Dyster, Australia in the Global Economy, (Cambridge, CUP, 1999), pp.225-26, 231, 247).

(&quot;Sydney had never experienced a property boom on the scale of that between 1969 and 1974. It involved a frenzy of buying, selling and building which reshaped the central business district, greatly increased the supply of industrial and retailing space, and accelerated the expansion of the city&#039;s fringe. Its visible legacy of empty offices and stunted subdivisions was matched by a host of financial casualties which incorporated an unknown, but very large, contingent of small investors, together with the spectacular demise of a number of development and construction companies and financial institutions. The boom was the most significant happening of the 1970s and the shock waves from the inevitable crash were felt right up to 1980. It was an extraordinary event for Sydney and Australia...&quot; (M.T. Daly, Sydney Boom Sydney Bust, (Sydney, George Allen &amp; Unwin, 1982), p.1).

America key to the future

Now that the argument that the world could decouple from America&#039;s problems has been discredited, a theory that history did not support, at this stage of the hegemonic cycle, America in the 1960s/1970s/1980s provides a good guide to observing the 1990s/2000s/2010s.

&quot;During Bill Clinton’s administration, the number of new jobs created was greater than the growth in the population of working-age Americans, something that had happened in only one previous administration since World War II, that of Lyndon B. Johnson&quot; (Floyd Norris, Economic Setbacks That Define the Bush Years, nytimes.com, January 24, 2008). 

In both &#039;rhymes&#039; - 1960s/1970s and 1990s/2000s - we have had two Democrat Administrations followed by two Republican Administrations followed by a Democrat administration.

The 1970s may said to have two expansions separated by a severe recession. The first expansion of the 1970s during the Nixon years rhymes with the first expansion of the 2000s during the Bush years.

Both these expansions occurred after mild recessions that started in the first year of both Nixon&#039;s and Bush&#039;s first terms in office.

&quot;President George W. Bush is the first president since Richard Nixon to preside over two recessions&quot; (Emily Kaiser, Recession started in December 2007: panel, reuters.com, December 1, 2008).

The mild Nixon recession from December 1968 to November 1970 is rhymed with the mild Bush recession of March 2001 to November 2001.

The monetary and fiscal response to mild recession was followed by economic expansion, which ended after the Dow Jones topping in 1973 and 2007 respectively.

(The Dow peaked five weeks after the Australian Labor took office in 1972; and 8 weeks before Labor took office in 2007).

The severe recession of November 1973 to March 1975 is rhymed with the severe Bush recession beginning December 2007.

The monetary response to the earlier period of severe recession contributed to the sharemarket rally of 1974-76.

The present monetary response also suggest a major sharemarket rally.

But the sharemarket peak in the boom following the mild Nixon recession occurred in the last year of Nixon&#039;s first term, whereas the sharemarket peak in the boom following the mild Bush recession occurred in the third year of Bush&#039;s second term.

With the peak in the stockmarket occurring late in Bush&#039;s second term it suggests that the sharemarket rally, following the severe Bush recession, will occur in the Obama administration.

&quot;As the U.S. economy slid into recession in 1974, the Fed again reversed course to ward off an even deeper recession. Indicators show a renewed monetary expansion that lasted into the late 1970s. The Bernanke-Blinder index from late 1974 into 1977 indicates that monetary policy was strongly expansionary. This expansion was not reflected in high inflation initially, consistent with a partial rebuilding of real balances ... Around 1978, the monetary stance turned slightly contractionary, becoming strongly contractionary in late 1979 and early 1980 under Paul Volcker, as inflation continued to worsen&quot; (Barsky &amp; Kilian).

The Fed is now engaged in a monetary expansionary to ward off an even deeper Bush recession, just as the Fed responded to the severe Nixon recession.

&quot;Based on the market&#039;s history of anticipating economic recoveries, the S&amp;P 500 may embark on its next bull market in February, about a month after Obama&#039;s inauguration on Jan. 20&quot; (Elizabeth Stanton, U.S. Stocks Post Biggest Post-Election Drop on Economic Concern, bloomberg.com, November 5, 2008).

History suggests that there will be a significant sharemarket and commodities rally ahead. The Dow rose 75.7% between 1974 and 1976.

&quot;The brutal 1981-82 recession ended the high inflation&quot; (Robert J. Samuelson, A &#039;Wealth Effect&#039; in Reverse, washingtonpost.com, November 25, 2008).

Inflation will once again raises its ugly head and the Fed will have to raise interest rates precipitating severe recession - a far deeper recession than if the 2007 recession allowed the market to fix the problem, which eventually it will.

The recession of January 1980 to July 1980 occurred in the last year of Jimmy Carter’s administration which suggest a recession will occur in Obama&#039;s administration following the sharemarket rally.

The Carter recession was followed by the Reagan recession from July 1981 to November 1982.

Severe recessions occur more often in Republican administrations suggesting that Obama may only be a one term president.

The recession/s following a future sharemarket bust will lead not to Carter/Reagan type recessions but to Hoover/Roosevelt type depressions.

The 2010s will be a time of severe deflation, instead of the dis-inflation of the 1980s.

The end of the recovery of the 1980s coincided with the end of the Soviet Union. This also suggest that the end of a comparable recovery will coincide with the end of the United States.

The military build-up under Reagan in the arms race with the Soviet Union has a rhyme with the Anglo-German naval race after the Great Depression of the Nineteenth Century. (Hitler followed in the footsteps of the Kaiser with a military build-up after the Great Depression in Germany in the Twentieth Century).

But this time around the United States, after its invasion of Afghanistan, will find itself in the position of the Soviet Union in the 1980s, after its invasion of Afghanistan, but with a German-dominated Europe winning the arms race and then unleashing its fire-power on America.

&quot;Battleships were a potent symbol of naval dominance and national might, and for decades the battleship was a major factor in both diplomacy and military strategy. The global arms race in battleship construction in the early 20th century was one of the causes of World War I, which saw a clash of huge battle fleets at the battle of Jutland...&quot; (Wikipedia, Battleship).

Just as the Germans built up a fleet of Dreadnoughts to take on the might of the British navy so the Europeans, after the Great Depression of the Twenty-first Century, will build up a fleet of aircraft-carriers to take on the might of the American navy.

(A German-dominated Europe will come up with an aircraft-carrier to compete with the new Ford-class carriers). 

&quot;Germany under Kaiser Wilhelm had drawn up detailed plans in 1900 for an invasion of the United States centered on attacks on New York City and Boston... One plan foresaw a force of 100,000 soldiers transported across the Atlantic on 60 ships.

&quot;&quot;Wilhelm II wanted colonies and military bases around the world,&quot; author Henning Sietz wrote in Die Zeit. &quot;The United States was increasingly getting in the Kaiser&#039;s way.&quot;

&quot;Beginning in 1897, a German navy lieutenant named Eberhard von Mantey was assigned the task of preparing an invasion of the United States after German and American interests had collided in the Pacific.

“Von Mantey&#039;s aim was to find a way to force the United States to sign a treaty giving Germany free reign in the Pacific and Atlantic. He rejected ideas of a naval blockade or a naval battle and made plans for an invasion of the northeast instead&quot; (Kaiser Wilhelm&#039;s Germany Had Plan to Take New York, reuters.com, May 8, 2002).

While WWI was an anticlimax for the dreadnoughts it will not be so with the aircraft-carriers which will play a significant part in the invasion of America.

&quot;Gorbachev was especially anxious to reduce military expenditure, which he new was bleeding his country. It was obvious, however, that Reagan was not only building up America&#039;s conventional weaponry; he was also calling for the extraordinarily ambitious Strategic Defense Initiative. Gorbachev believed that if the Soviet Union was forced to engage in astronomically expensive spending for defensive weapons, it might never remedy its internal weaknesses. He concluded that he had to try to reach an arms reduction agreement with the United States. Nothing else would enable him to advance the perestroika that would rescue the Soviet economy&quot; (James T. Patterson, Restless Giant, (New York, OUP, 2005), p.214).

&quot;... Roosevelt himself stood before the world in 1938 [the year of the Munich Agreement] as a badly weakened leader, unable to summon the imagination or to secure the political strength to cure his own country’s apparently endless economic crisis. In the ninth year of the Great Depression and the sixth year of Roosevelt&#039;s New Deal, with more than ten million workers still unemployed, America had still not found a formula for economic recovery. From such a leader, what could the democracies hope? From such a troubled nation, what did the dictators have to fear&quot; (David M. Kennedy, Freedom from fear, (New York: OUP, 1999), p.362).

A future American leader will find himself in a position which rhymes with Neville Chamberlain and Mikhail Gorbachev.

&quot;The Soviet Union, he [Gorbachev] said, would except &quot;without delay&quot; the elimination within five years of Soviet and American intermediate-range missiles in Europe. This was a major break through, enabling Reagan and Gorbachev to agree to a intermediate nuclear forces (INF) treaty, which the two leaders signed with great fanfare in Washington in December 1987... 

&quot;Reagan then had to convince Cold War hard-liners to accept the treaty. This proved problematic at first; some foes of the treaty likened him to Britain&#039;s Neville Chamberlain, who had appeased Hitler in the 1930s. But Gorbachev soon announced that the USSR would begin to pull its troops out of Afghanistan and complete the process by February 1989&quot; (Patterson, p.216).

A future American &#039;appeasement&#039; treaty with Europe will not abode well for America as the British &#039;appeasement&#039; treaty with Germany in the 1930s did not abode well for Britain.
					
Winston Churchill&#039;s denouncement of the Munich Agreement in the House of Commons is a warning from history for America when she, in weakness, commits to a yet future treaty:

&quot;We have suffered a total and unmitigated defeat...you will find that in a period of time which may be measured by years, but may be measured by months, Czechoslovakia will be engulfed in the Nazi régime. We are in the presence of a disaster of the first magnitude...we have sustained a defeat without a war, the consequences of which will travel far with us along our road...we have passed an awful milestone in our history, when the whole equilibrium of Europe has been deranged, and that the terrible words have for the time being been pronounced against the Western democracies: &quot;Thou art weighed in the balance and found wanting&quot;. And do not suppose that this is the end. This is only the beginning of the reckoning. This is only the first sip, the first foretaste of a bitter cup which will be proffered to us year by year unless by a supreme recovery of moral health and martial vigour, we arise again and take our stand for freedom as in the olden time&quot; (Wikipedia, Munich Agreement).

Unfortunately America will not genuinely repent - a supreme recovery of moral health - and the Anglo-Celtic component of the United States, left alive after the conquest of the north America - a &#039;turkey shoot’, estimated at around 25 million, will begin their enforced removal from the land of the now unfree, by Europe and her allies, probably still incensed by Anglo-Saxon &#039;casino&#039; capitalism&#039;s depression.

The defeat of the United States will be facilitated if she tears herself apart in the coming Great Depression and its aftermath, which is highly likely. [Multi-ethnic states will experience severe strain and/or breakup in this second or greater depression].

&quot;The Nazi German invasion of Britain would have not been a gentle affair. The captured German papers leave no doubt of that. On September 9 [1940] Brauchitsch, the Commander in chief of the Army, signed a directive providing that &quot;the able-bodied male population between the ages of seventeen and forty-five [in Britain] will, unless the local situation calls for an exceptional ruling, be interned and dispatched to the Continent... In no other conquered country, not even in Poland, had the Germans begun with such a drastic step ... [the plans]... seem designed to ensure the systematic plunder of the island and the terrorization of its inhabitants... Everything but normal household stocks were to be confiscated at once&quot; (William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, (Sydney: Random House Australia, 1998), p.782).

Just as the ‘experts’ were shocked by the unexpected fall of the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Union the world will be shocked by the end of America; and of course Anglo-Celtic Australia.

The three words &quot;it won&#039;t happen&quot; rhymes with its four word counterpart - &quot;it&#039;s a new era&quot;. There is nothing new under the sun. Defeat and deportation has been the pattern of the past and will be of the future.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Patterns of the past for the future</p>
<p>"We are entering an era where it is now politically acceptable to avoid recessions and higher unemployment by doing the exact things that created these economic problems to begin with" (Kenneth J. Gerbino, Coconuts and Gold, 321gold.com, January 26, 2009). </p>
<p>To see how this latest new era is likely to play out, comments from a research paper form the foundation of a template to view the future:</p>
<p>"It is common to associate the origins of the Great Stagflation of the 1970s with the two major oil price increases of 1973/74 and 1979/80. This paper argues that oil price increases were not nearly as essential a part of the causal mechanism generating stagflation as is often thought. We provide a model that can explain the bulk of stagflation by monetary expansions and contractions without reference to supply shocks... The oil supply shock view also fails to explain the dramatic surge in the price of other industrial commodities that preceded the 1973/74 oil price increase and the fact that increases in industrial commodity prices lead oil price increases in the OPEC period. (Abstract).</p>
<p>"The two most prominent increases in the price of oil in 1973/74 and 1979/80 were both preceded by periods of unusually low real interest rates ... and economic expansion. (p.26).</p>
<p>"The monetary model of stagflation ... relies on some initial monetary expansion to induce the countercyclical movements in output and inflation. A first test of the model is to verify that the two main episodes of global "stagflation" in 1973/74 and 1979/80 were indeed preceded by unusually large increases in world excess money supply...One indicator of liquidity is world money growth...</p>
<p>"Figure 2a shows a sharp increase in world money growth in 1971-72 and in 1977-78 preceding the two primary stagflationary episodes... The increase in world money growth is followed by an unprecedented rise in world price inflation in 1973-74 and in 1979-80...</p>
<p>"We now turn to the United States where the monetary expansions of the 1970s originated. Figure 3 shows that U.S. liquidity followed a pattern similar to that of other industrial countries.</p>
<p>"Figure 3a shows two unprecedented spikes in money growth in 1971-1972 and in 1975-1977 that<br />
preceded two episodes of unusually high deflator inflation in 1974 and in 1980 ... and that coincided with two episodes of significantly negative growth in real money balances in 1973-74 and 1978-1980...</p>
<p>"Additional evidence of excess liquidity in the 1970s is provided by the U.S. real interest rate. Figure 3d shows that 1972-76 and 1976-80 were periods of abnormally low real interest rates... the timing of the 1973/74 and 1979/80 oil price increases coincided with a sharp rise in real interest rates. For that reason we conclude that the likely source of the low real interest rates observed in the 1970s is the preceding monetary expansion...</p>
<p>"The Bernanke-Blinder index based on the Federal Funds rate shows a strongly expansionary stance from mid-1970 to the end of 1972... The contractionary response of the Fed in 1973 to the inflationary pressures set in motion by earlier Fed policy is a key element of our monetary explanation of stagflation...</p>
<p>"As the U.S. economy slid into recession in 1974, the Fed again reversed course to ward off an even deeper recession. Indicators show a renewed monetary expansion that lasted into the late 1970s. The Bernanke-Blinder index from late 1974 into 1977 indicates that monetary policy was strongly expansionary. This expansion was not reflected in high inflation initially, consistent with a partial rebuilding of real balances ... and the well-documented fact that inflation only occurs with a delay (see Nelson 1998)... Around 1978, the monetary stance turned slightly contractionary, becoming strongly contractionary in late 1979 and early 1980 under Paul Volcker, as inflation continued to worsen. Once again, the monetary policy stance provides an alternative explanation for the genesis of stagflation" (Robert B. Barsky, University of Michigan, NBER, and Lutz Kilian, University of Michigan CEPR, A Monetary Explanation of the Great Stagflation of the 1970s, fordschool.umich.edu/rsie/workingpapers/Papers451-475/r452.pdf, January 27, 2000).</p>
<p>Mark Twain, it is said, noted that history rhymes. So when comparing rhymes, where they occur in the inflation/deflation longwave cycle needs to be taken into consideration.</p>
<p>So in this war/peace influenced cycle, in the Cold War period consumer price inflation is primary and asset price inflation is secondary while in the post-Cold War period asset price inflation is primary and consumer price is secondary. In the former the crisis concerns inflation; and in the latter the crisis concerns deflation - credit crunch/decrease in money supply leading to asset price deflation.</p>
<p>This article argues that the pattern of events of the 1970s/80s, informed by the above consideration, provides a template to view the 2000s/2010s.</p>
<p>Trade provides a starting comparison.</p>
<p>Trade - early-1970 &amp; mid-2000s</p>
<p>"After four years of 4.9% average growth in world GDP over the 2003-06 interval, the IMF is projecting two more years of the same...</p>
<p>"The IMF has calculated its official estimates of world GDP as measured on a purchasing power parity basis back to 1970. Over this 37-year history, there is only one four-year growth spurt that is stronger than that of 2003-06 - the 5.4% average annual growth outcome for 1970-73. Unlike the current IMF forecast, which calls for another two years of boom-like conditions, the four-year growth surge of the early 1970s was followed by a sharp recession in the global economy, with average gains of just 2.3% over the 1974-75 period" (Stephen Roach, Rosy Goes Global, morganstanley.com, April 13, 2007).</p>
<p>Australia benefited from trade in the early 1970s and followed the pattern of the research paper.</p>
<p>"Australia's position in the global economy appeared to improve significantly in the early 1970s. Strong economic growth in the industrial nations drove up international demand for primary products, pushing their prices to record levels and Australia's exports boomed. The world economy was shaken by the dramatic oil price rises in 1972 and 1973, but Australia seemed better placed than most of the OECD in that it was ... and its coal exports made it a net energy exporter. Australia's exports earnings were so great in 1972 and 1973 that they produced an overall current account balance of payments surplus, a rare occurrence...</p>
<p>"The Long Boom came to an end in 1974 when the industrial economies entered a severe recession that impacted one on the other. The economic indicators of the period were reversed: ... economic growth declined and unemployment increased...</p>
<p>"Weak recovery from the 1974-75 world recession occurred from 1976 and continued to 1980...</p>
<p>"There was a brief upswing in the world economy at the end of the 1970s as the industrial countries expanded output. Demand for primary products recovered and Australia's terms of trade improved..."  (David Meredith &amp; Barrie Dyster, Australia in the Global Economy, (Cambridge, CUP, 1999), pp.225-26, 231, 247).</p>
<p>("Sydney had never experienced a property boom on the scale of that between 1969 and 1974. It involved a frenzy of buying, selling and building which reshaped the central business district, greatly increased the supply of industrial and retailing space, and accelerated the expansion of the city's fringe. Its visible legacy of empty offices and stunted subdivisions was matched by a host of financial casualties which incorporated an unknown, but very large, contingent of small investors, together with the spectacular demise of a number of development and construction companies and financial institutions. The boom was the most significant happening of the 1970s and the shock waves from the inevitable crash were felt right up to 1980. It was an extraordinary event for Sydney and Australia..." (M.T. Daly, Sydney Boom Sydney Bust, (Sydney, George Allen &amp; Unwin, 1982), p.1).</p>
<p>America key to the future</p>
<p>Now that the argument that the world could decouple from America's problems has been discredited, a theory that history did not support, at this stage of the hegemonic cycle, America in the 1960s/1970s/1980s provides a good guide to observing the 1990s/2000s/2010s.</p>
<p>"During Bill Clinton’s administration, the number of new jobs created was greater than the growth in the population of working-age Americans, something that had happened in only one previous administration since World War II, that of Lyndon B. Johnson" (Floyd Norris, Economic Setbacks That Define the Bush Years, nytimes.com, January 24, 2008). </p>
<p>In both 'rhymes' - 1960s/1970s and 1990s/2000s - we have had two Democrat Administrations followed by two Republican Administrations followed by a Democrat administration.</p>
<p>The 1970s may said to have two expansions separated by a severe recession. The first expansion of the 1970s during the Nixon years rhymes with the first expansion of the 2000s during the Bush years.</p>
<p>Both these expansions occurred after mild recessions that started in the first year of both Nixon's and Bush's first terms in office.</p>
<p>"President George W. Bush is the first president since Richard Nixon to preside over two recessions" (Emily Kaiser, Recession started in December 2007: panel, reuters.com, December 1, 2008).</p>
<p>The mild Nixon recession from December 1968 to November 1970 is rhymed with the mild Bush recession of March 2001 to November 2001.</p>
<p>The monetary and fiscal response to mild recession was followed by economic expansion, which ended after the Dow Jones topping in 1973 and 2007 respectively.</p>
<p>(The Dow peaked five weeks after the Australian Labor took office in 1972; and 8 weeks before Labor took office in 2007).</p>
<p>The severe recession of November 1973 to March 1975 is rhymed with the severe Bush recession beginning December 2007.</p>
<p>The monetary response to the earlier period of severe recession contributed to the sharemarket rally of 1974-76.</p>
<p>The present monetary response also suggest a major sharemarket rally.</p>
<p>But the sharemarket peak in the boom following the mild Nixon recession occurred in the last year of Nixon's first term, whereas the sharemarket peak in the boom following the mild Bush recession occurred in the third year of Bush's second term.</p>
<p>With the peak in the stockmarket occurring late in Bush's second term it suggests that the sharemarket rally, following the severe Bush recession, will occur in the Obama administration.</p>
<p>"As the U.S. economy slid into recession in 1974, the Fed again reversed course to ward off an even deeper recession. Indicators show a renewed monetary expansion that lasted into the late 1970s. The Bernanke-Blinder index from late 1974 into 1977 indicates that monetary policy was strongly expansionary. This expansion was not reflected in high inflation initially, consistent with a partial rebuilding of real balances ... Around 1978, the monetary stance turned slightly contractionary, becoming strongly contractionary in late 1979 and early 1980 under Paul Volcker, as inflation continued to worsen" (Barsky &amp; Kilian).</p>
<p>The Fed is now engaged in a monetary expansionary to ward off an even deeper Bush recession, just as the Fed responded to the severe Nixon recession.</p>
<p>"Based on the market's history of anticipating economic recoveries, the S&amp;P 500 may embark on its next bull market in February, about a month after Obama's inauguration on Jan. 20" (Elizabeth Stanton, U.S. Stocks Post Biggest Post-Election Drop on Economic Concern, bloomberg.com, November 5, 2008).</p>
<p>History suggests that there will be a significant sharemarket and commodities rally ahead. The Dow rose 75.7% between 1974 and 1976.</p>
<p>"The brutal 1981-82 recession ended the high inflation" (Robert J. Samuelson, A 'Wealth Effect' in Reverse, washingtonpost.com, November 25, 2008).</p>
<p>Inflation will once again raises its ugly head and the Fed will have to raise interest rates precipitating severe recession - a far deeper recession than if the 2007 recession allowed the market to fix the problem, which eventually it will.</p>
<p>The recession of January 1980 to July 1980 occurred in the last year of Jimmy Carter’s administration which suggest a recession will occur in Obama's administration following the sharemarket rally.</p>
<p>The Carter recession was followed by the Reagan recession from July 1981 to November 1982.</p>
<p>Severe recessions occur more often in Republican administrations suggesting that Obama may only be a one term president.</p>
<p>The recession/s following a future sharemarket bust will lead not to Carter/Reagan type recessions but to Hoover/Roosevelt type depressions.</p>
<p>The 2010s will be a time of severe deflation, instead of the dis-inflation of the 1980s.</p>
<p>The end of the recovery of the 1980s coincided with the end of the Soviet Union. This also suggest that the end of a comparable recovery will coincide with the end of the United States.</p>
<p>The military build-up under Reagan in the arms race with the Soviet Union has a rhyme with the Anglo-German naval race after the Great Depression of the Nineteenth Century. (Hitler followed in the footsteps of the Kaiser with a military build-up after the Great Depression in Germany in the Twentieth Century).</p>
<p>But this time around the United States, after its invasion of Afghanistan, will find itself in the position of the Soviet Union in the 1980s, after its invasion of Afghanistan, but with a German-dominated Europe winning the arms race and then unleashing its fire-power on America.</p>
<p>"Battleships were a potent symbol of naval dominance and national might, and for decades the battleship was a major factor in both diplomacy and military strategy. The global arms race in battleship construction in the early 20th century was one of the causes of World War I, which saw a clash of huge battle fleets at the battle of Jutland..." (Wikipedia, Battleship).</p>
<p>Just as the Germans built up a fleet of Dreadnoughts to take on the might of the British navy so the Europeans, after the Great Depression of the Twenty-first Century, will build up a fleet of aircraft-carriers to take on the might of the American navy.</p>
<p>(A German-dominated Europe will come up with an aircraft-carrier to compete with the new Ford-class carriers). </p>
<p>"Germany under Kaiser Wilhelm had drawn up detailed plans in 1900 for an invasion of the United States centered on attacks on New York City and Boston... One plan foresaw a force of 100,000 soldiers transported across the Atlantic on 60 ships.</p>
<p>""Wilhelm II wanted colonies and military bases around the world," author Henning Sietz wrote in Die Zeit. "The United States was increasingly getting in the Kaiser's way."</p>
<p>"Beginning in 1897, a German navy lieutenant named Eberhard von Mantey was assigned the task of preparing an invasion of the United States after German and American interests had collided in the Pacific.</p>
<p>“Von Mantey's aim was to find a way to force the United States to sign a treaty giving Germany free reign in the Pacific and Atlantic. He rejected ideas of a naval blockade or a naval battle and made plans for an invasion of the northeast instead" (Kaiser Wilhelm's Germany Had Plan to Take New York, reuters.com, May 8, 2002).</p>
<p>While WWI was an anticlimax for the dreadnoughts it will not be so with the aircraft-carriers which will play a significant part in the invasion of America.</p>
<p>"Gorbachev was especially anxious to reduce military expenditure, which he new was bleeding his country. It was obvious, however, that Reagan was not only building up America's conventional weaponry; he was also calling for the extraordinarily ambitious Strategic Defense Initiative. Gorbachev believed that if the Soviet Union was forced to engage in astronomically expensive spending for defensive weapons, it might never remedy its internal weaknesses. He concluded that he had to try to reach an arms reduction agreement with the United States. Nothing else would enable him to advance the perestroika that would rescue the Soviet economy" (James T. Patterson, Restless Giant, (New York, OUP, 2005), p.214).</p>
<p>"... Roosevelt himself stood before the world in 1938 [the year of the Munich Agreement] as a badly weakened leader, unable to summon the imagination or to secure the political strength to cure his own country’s apparently endless economic crisis. In the ninth year of the Great Depression and the sixth year of Roosevelt's New Deal, with more than ten million workers still unemployed, America had still not found a formula for economic recovery. From such a leader, what could the democracies hope? From such a troubled nation, what did the dictators have to fear" (David M. Kennedy, Freedom from fear, (New York: OUP, 1999), p.362).</p>
<p>A future American leader will find himself in a position which rhymes with Neville Chamberlain and Mikhail Gorbachev.</p>
<p>"The Soviet Union, he [Gorbachev] said, would except "without delay" the elimination within five years of Soviet and American intermediate-range missiles in Europe. This was a major break through, enabling Reagan and Gorbachev to agree to a intermediate nuclear forces (INF) treaty, which the two leaders signed with great fanfare in Washington in December 1987... </p>
<p>"Reagan then had to convince Cold War hard-liners to accept the treaty. This proved problematic at first; some foes of the treaty likened him to Britain's Neville Chamberlain, who had appeased Hitler in the 1930s. But Gorbachev soon announced that the USSR would begin to pull its troops out of Afghanistan and complete the process by February 1989" (Patterson, p.216).</p>
<p>A future American 'appeasement' treaty with Europe will not abode well for America as the British 'appeasement' treaty with Germany in the 1930s did not abode well for Britain.</p>
<p>Winston Churchill's denouncement of the Munich Agreement in the House of Commons is a warning from history for America when she, in weakness, commits to a yet future treaty:</p>
<p>"We have suffered a total and unmitigated defeat...you will find that in a period of time which may be measured by years, but may be measured by months, Czechoslovakia will be engulfed in the Nazi régime. We are in the presence of a disaster of the first magnitude...we have sustained a defeat without a war, the consequences of which will travel far with us along our road...we have passed an awful milestone in our history, when the whole equilibrium of Europe has been deranged, and that the terrible words have for the time being been pronounced against the Western democracies: "Thou art weighed in the balance and found wanting". And do not suppose that this is the end. This is only the beginning of the reckoning. This is only the first sip, the first foretaste of a bitter cup which will be proffered to us year by year unless by a supreme recovery of moral health and martial vigour, we arise again and take our stand for freedom as in the olden time" (Wikipedia, Munich Agreement).</p>
<p>Unfortunately America will not genuinely repent - a supreme recovery of moral health - and the Anglo-Celtic component of the United States, left alive after the conquest of the north America - a 'turkey shoot’, estimated at around 25 million, will begin their enforced removal from the land of the now unfree, by Europe and her allies, probably still incensed by Anglo-Saxon 'casino' capitalism's depression.</p>
<p>The defeat of the United States will be facilitated if she tears herself apart in the coming Great Depression and its aftermath, which is highly likely. [Multi-ethnic states will experience severe strain and/or breakup in this second or greater depression].</p>
<p>"The Nazi German invasion of Britain would have not been a gentle affair. The captured German papers leave no doubt of that. On September 9 [1940] Brauchitsch, the Commander in chief of the Army, signed a directive providing that "the able-bodied male population between the ages of seventeen and forty-five [in Britain] will, unless the local situation calls for an exceptional ruling, be interned and dispatched to the Continent... In no other conquered country, not even in Poland, had the Germans begun with such a drastic step ... [the plans]... seem designed to ensure the systematic plunder of the island and the terrorization of its inhabitants... Everything but normal household stocks were to be confiscated at once" (William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, (Sydney: Random House Australia, 1998), p.782).</p>
<p>Just as the ‘experts’ were shocked by the unexpected fall of the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Union the world will be shocked by the end of America; and of course Anglo-Celtic Australia.</p>
<p>The three words "it won't happen" rhymes with its four word counterpart - "it's a new era". There is nothing new under the sun. Defeat and deportation has been the pattern of the past and will be of the future.</p>
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