Rolling US Economy Into The Shitbin Thread

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Does anyone think that the last month or so has made the US economy look more stable? Or even had no effect on it's rating? Unfortunately, capitalism is based on perceptions to some degree, and S&P's decision shapes percepeption in a (perhaps small) way, and their decision is probably more based on perceptions than specific numbers.

textbook blows on the head (dowd), Saturday, 6 August 2011 16:37 (fourteen years ago)

This downgrading is a good opportunity for poor, maligned US corporations to push that 'one-time'
Corporate Tax Holiday they've been salivating over for a while.

"This MUST be done! Look at how much the economy is hurting!"

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 7 August 2011 13:12 (fourteen years ago)

bloomberg reports carmen reinhart, senior fellow at the (way conservative) peterson institute, is arguing the following ~

A restructuring of U.S. household debt, including debt forgiveness for low-income Americans, would be most effective in speeding economic growth, said Carmen Reinhart, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

“Until we deal head-on with the fact that some of those debts are not ever going to be repaid, we will continue to have this shadow” over growth, Reinhart said today in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt,” airing this weekend.

dang

reggie (qualmsley), Sunday, 7 August 2011 16:00 (fourteen years ago)

here is the point where i argue yet again for making student loan debt dischargeable in bankruptcy like other non-recourse debt.

My name is Frunze. Learn it well it is the chilling sound of your doom (Eisbaer), Sunday, 7 August 2011 16:02 (fourteen years ago)

I think it's inevitable in the longer term

iatee, Sunday, 7 August 2011 16:09 (fourteen years ago)

the eventual devaluing of the dollar is gonna be a good thing right, means I can move to a gold mine and pay off all my debt with just a day of work

dayo, Sunday, 7 August 2011 19:39 (fourteen years ago)

Let's all start from zero.

saint dominic's p4k review (Eazy), Sunday, 7 August 2011 19:41 (fourteen years ago)

i keep wondering if efficiency is eventually gonna outstrip capitalism, where half the country is unemployed simply cuz they're not needed anymore.....Soylent Green ya'll

Neanderthal, Sunday, 7 August 2011 23:29 (fourteen years ago)

Or a pre-industrial situation, where 20-30% of the population is intermittently or always unemployed.

Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Sunday, 7 August 2011 23:36 (fourteen years ago)

we already have them, they're called "retirees"

Kerm, Monday, 8 August 2011 00:17 (fourteen years ago)

marx figured eventually we will be so efficient that we can spend all our time hunting

max, Monday, 8 August 2011 00:24 (fourteen years ago)

krugman has been so weird on the debt downgrade. like i completely agree that the rating agencies have no credibility and that their business model is corrupt, but the downgrade was based on news that's been obvious to everyone on earth who cared to pay attention. i doubt that standard and poor's seeing what everyone else sees is going to shake up markets anymore than america's terrible political system already has. the only reason i can think of that he's so worked up about it is that he sees the process of destroying the government's credit as the right's way of attacking any semblance of the welfare state and thinks that the downgrade really strengthens their hand.

circles, Monday, 8 August 2011 01:44 (fourteen years ago)

krugman has been so weird on the debt downgrade. like i completely agree that the rating agencies have no credibility and that their business model is corrupt,

don't think you have to go beyond this

iatee, Monday, 8 August 2011 01:49 (fourteen years ago)

(the diagram centers on mcgraw-hill because they own s&p.)

j., Monday, 8 August 2011 02:39 (fourteen years ago)

mcgraw-hill like the same people that make textbooks??

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 8 August 2011 02:51 (fourteen years ago)

they also publish aviation week and own j.d. power and associates

j., Monday, 8 August 2011 02:54 (fourteen years ago)

xpost

http://www.vaiden.net/quick_draw.jpg
http://www.wvah.com/programs/kingofthehill/hankhill.jpg

Neanderthal, Monday, 8 August 2011 02:54 (fourteen years ago)

larry elliot's latest state of play article.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/aug/07/global-financial-crisis-key-stages

he says we're less than halfway through a crisis that began in 2007.

Dark Noises from the Eurozone (Tracer Hand), Monday, 8 August 2011 11:39 (fourteen years ago)

And from David Harvey -

The perpetual accumulation of capital and of wealth is therefore crucially dependent upon the perpetual accumulation and expansion of debt. These two variables – accumulation of capital and the accumulation of debt – have in fact run alongside each other in the history of capitalism (go look at the data), both feeding and supporting each other. They occasionally get out of sync to create a crisis of the sort recently witnessed. What looks like a crisis of Greek sovereign debt is in fact a crisis of the financial system which arises because of a failure to find new ways to expand the surplus through reinvestment!

A startling conclusion follows. A vote against further debt creation is a vote to end capitalism! Fortunately or unfortunately (depending upon one’s political point of view) the Koch Brothers and the Republican Party cannot see that. Marx had always hoped that rebellious workers might end capitalism. So far they have not succeeded. So maybe the Koch brothers and the Republican Party can succeed where the workers have so far failed. Marx might not have been too surprised at that. As he also gleefully noted, individual capitalists operating in their own self-interest often take actions that collectively threaten the continuity of capitalism as a whole.

It is unlikely, of course, that the Republicans will stick to this crusading mission for very long. When in power their record is very different. The Reagan and Bush Jnr administrations were profligate in debt creation. (“Reagan taught us that deficits don’t matter,” famously said Vice-President Cheney). Nevertheless, short-term, the crusading Republicans may cause a lot of damage to the system they ostensibly support. As Marx also noted: the contradictions of capitalism move in mysterious ways.

http://davidharvey.org/2011/07/the-vote-to-end-capitalism/

Dark Noises from the Eurozone (Tracer Hand), Monday, 8 August 2011 11:45 (fourteen years ago)

And from a Big Picture guest blogger -

No, the issue of ability of the United States to pay its debts is unquestionable by even Standard & Poor’s. And the propensity or willingness to pay its debts, despite the recent political debate, must be assessed relative to the entire history of the Republic. The federal government of the United States has always paid its obligations – for hundreds of years.

So what’s all the fuss?

The fact of the matter amounts to nothing more or less than that a private company elected to deliver a verbal spanking to the congress, executive and – by extension – the people of the U.S. for the messiness of its political process and its confused electorate. Effectively – the S&P pronouncement last evening amounted to not much more than a guest in your house telling your children to clean up their rooms “or else.” I don’t know about you, but in my case, at least, I would ask such a guest to apologize or leave.

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2011/08/on-the-sp-downgrade-of-the-united-states-of-america/

Dark Noises from the Eurozone (Tracer Hand), Monday, 8 August 2011 11:55 (fourteen years ago)

Look, I know these S&P guys. Not these particular guys — I don’t know John Chambers or David Beers personally. But I know the rating agencies intimately. Back when I was an in-house lawyer for an investment bank, I had extensive interactions with all three rating agencies. We needed to get a lot of deals rated, and I was almost always involved in that process in the deals I worked on. To say that S&P analysts aren’t the sharpest tools in the drawer is a massive understatement.

Naturally, before meeting with a rating agency, we would plan out our arguments — you want to make sure you’re making your strongest arguments, that everyone is on the same page about the deal’s positive attributes, etc. With S&P, it got to the point where we were constantly saying, “that’s a good point, but is S&P smart enough to understand that argument?” I kid you not, that was a hard-constraint in our game-plan.

http://economicsofcontempt.blogspot.com/2011/08/on-s-downgrades-and-idiots.html

Dark Noises from the Eurozone (Tracer Hand), Monday, 8 August 2011 12:01 (fourteen years ago)

dow opened 200 points down. happy times!

reggie (qualmsley), Monday, 8 August 2011 14:11 (fourteen years ago)

the picture michael lewis gives in the big short is that only dunderheads wind up working at the ratings agencies. all the poindexters work for goldman sachs and j.p. morgan &c.

dayo, Monday, 8 August 2011 14:14 (fourteen years ago)

krugz:

Maybe there is an S&P story — but not the one you think. Arguably, that downgrade will bully policy makers into even more deflationary, contractionary policies than they would have undertaken otherwise, which has the perverse effect of making US debt more attractive, since the alternatives are worse.

Dark Noises from the Eurozone (Tracer Hand), Monday, 8 August 2011 15:29 (fourteen years ago)

what scares me the most about all this is that war mobilization was the only way out of the 1937 retrenchment

Dark Noises from the Eurozone (Tracer Hand), Monday, 8 August 2011 15:42 (fourteen years ago)

Yeah, I fear for our inability to drum up any pretext to go to war.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 8 August 2011 15:47 (fourteen years ago)

These days, who needs pretext? Or use of the word 'war'?

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 8 August 2011 16:04 (fourteen years ago)

No kidding. How many people are even aware of our third war right now?

jon /via/ chi 2.0, Monday, 8 August 2011 16:06 (fourteen years ago)

what, that little thing?

j., Monday, 8 August 2011 17:27 (fourteen years ago)

as if listening to the great financial minds at S&P opine on the creditworthiness of the US wasn't bad enough, look who's wasting valuable space in the NYT pontificating about the current financial mess.

My name is Frunze. Learn it well it is the chilling sound of your doom (Eisbaer), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 17:54 (fourteen years ago)

i mean, really ... reading Henry Paulson talk about the current financial mess is like listening to David Berkowitz talk about Ted Bundy.

My name is Frunze. Learn it well it is the chilling sound of your doom (Eisbaer), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 17:54 (fourteen years ago)

Seeing as almost non-existent interest rates can't be cut any more, would the Fed ever consider paying people to borrow money? It seems to me that would be highly stimulative.

clemenza, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 18:04 (fourteen years ago)

war mobilization was the only way out of the 1937 retrenchment

Not the only way, but a very effective way, in that army enlistment and the draft gave 'employment' to large numbers of men who would otherwise have been filling jobs or else looking for them, plus it greatly expanded demand and put vast sums of money into circulation (much of which was sopped back up as war bonds).

But effective as it was, there's no requirement for starting a war to get the economy moving again, just as there are numerous ways to skin a cat.

Aimless, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 21:06 (fourteen years ago)

the thing about that saying is i can never think of any other half-effective way besides "with a knife," basically.

puerile fantasies (Matt P), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 21:13 (fourteen years ago)

i guess the only way out of this mess is knives!

puerile fantasies (Matt P), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 21:15 (fourteen years ago)

How many people are even aware of our third war right now?

4th by my count

satan club sandwich (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 03:23 (fourteen years ago)

don't forget the war on christmas, too

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 10 August 2011 03:24 (fourteen years ago)

lol

tine nic (k3vin k.), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 03:37 (fourteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qcRuxq0YCQ

Gorge, Wednesday, 10 August 2011 17:53 (fourteen years ago)

ever *have a hunch* you shouldn't press play?

puerile fantasies (Matt P), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 17:58 (fourteen years ago)

It's on YouTube, how bad can it be?

nickn, Wednesday, 10 August 2011 18:05 (fourteen years ago)

offensive - but not in a NSFW kind of way...

rockapads, Wednesday, 10 August 2011 18:48 (fourteen years ago)

i'm just saying i can always do without gothy fishnets

puerile fantasies (Matt P), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 18:50 (fourteen years ago)

It's on YouTube, how bad can it be?

Lord Jesus, help me resist this temptation

pathos of the unwarranted encore (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 19:07 (fourteen years ago)

It's on the buffet table, go ahead and take some!

nickn, Wednesday, 10 August 2011 19:24 (fourteen years ago)

The salad bar has a sneeze guard, what are you worried about?

L.P. Hovercraft (WmC), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 20:42 (fourteen years ago)

Long, interesting article on the hollowing out of the US middle class:

http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2011/09/can-the-middle-class-be-saved/8600/?single_page=true

o. nate, Thursday, 11 August 2011 20:56 (fourteen years ago)

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/13/business/financial-aftershocks-with-precedent-in-history.html

this is a good article, why the hell is it internet-only?

tine nic (k3vin k.), Saturday, 13 August 2011 01:20 (fourteen years ago)

warren buffet says TAX US

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/15/opinion/stop-coddling-the-super-rich.html?_r=1&ref=opinion

dayo, Monday, 15 August 2011 14:28 (fourteen years ago)


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