by copious.abundance » Sun 07 Feb 2010, 00:53:36
You said:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'T')he evidence becomes stronger every day. I am so tired of hearing that a housing boom in the "Inland Empire" or Cleveland, Ohio caused this world economic contraction. Germany and Japan went into recession before the US real estate crash or the financial meltdown.
Obviously you were implying that since Germany and Japan entered recession before the US (so you thought), the worldwide recession was not caused by a US real estate collapse. After all, if the worldwide recession was started with a US real estate collapse, how could the recessions in Germany and Japan have started first?
But now that you have been instructed that the recession in the US did, in fact, precede the recessions in Germany and Japan, it is wise for you to revisit your statement and its conclusion. If the worldwide recession was, in fact, started by a collapse of US real estate, it would make sense that the worldwide recession first began in the US.
Check, we have that verified.
Next, as mentioned by others in this thread, by no small conicidence, Germany and Japan are big exporting nations, and one of their biggest - if not THE biggest - of their customers is the USofA.
If you are a business or nation, and your biggest customer (or, one of the top 2 or 3) suddenly goes into economic spasms, your own business is going to soon follow suit.
Chekc, we have that verified, as the recessions in Japan and Germany followed the US by a few months or so.
Utterly, totally logical, onc e you have the facts straight.
As a footnote, I should mention that the economies of Germany and Japan are much less oil-intensive than the US. If your original claim that recessions in Japan and Germany preceded the US, AND they were caused by high oil prices, then it would follow that Germany and Japan would be among the LAST nations affected by high oil prices (and thus, among the LAST to enter recession), since their economies are not so sensitive to oil prices.
So, one way or another, your original claim cannot have been correct.