by smallpoxgirl » Sat 22 Mar 2008, 21:49:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('patience', 'S')mallpoxgirl,
Exactly, if you can't get a loan now, it's because you're not a good credit risk. Problem is, much of our economy for several years has been based on loaning money to people who were poor credit risks, so they could buy stuff they couldn't afford. Take them out of the equation, and sales go down. (Consumerism is said to be 70% of the economy in the US.) Then, the rest follows it down.
Yep, the govt AND the sheeple are all mortgaged to the hilt, and the result is, who can afford to take on MORE debt to keep this thing crankin' along? How many can be fooled into paying to much for a house that is decreasing in value? And how much more cheap imported electronic crap do we really need? How long can we convince China and the Arabs to keep propping up our insolvent banks?
The FED has, by some reports, already gone through about half of their reserves keeping the finance sector from collapsing, and some say we'll see bad results by April 1, cheap money notwithstanding.
I'm betting that this whole thing goes down like a lead duck, and what the politicians do will be too little, and it's already too late for the IB's. Rumors now say Lehman's and Goldman Sachs ain't near what they are cracked up to be. Think I heard that the Arabs don't want to put any more into Citibank. What's that sucking sound? Did somebody flush a bank?
Yeah. People pulling out investment, banks collapsing, I see all that. What's that do? It devalues the dollar, leading to inflation. The government then passes some deficit spending "economic stimulus" package, which leads to inflation. If they can't sell enough T-Bills to cover the deficit, they'll have to raise the interest rate, leading to inflation. If, some how miraculously, we're still in deflation, all they've got to do is crank up the printing presses and make more money.