by Concerned » Tue 19 Oct 2004, 22:46:26
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')Meanwhile, the US government will keep the debt monetization mill running full steam. This will produce high inflation of things like realestate, labor and especially oil. I can't see paying off your mortgage because I think that your $300,000 house will soon be worth $1M. You'll have a hard enough time paying for your groceries, etc, with your now pathetic salary to worry about paying down your mortgage.
Mabye it will and mabye it won't. Where is the pressure for wages going to come from? If you're job is being outsourced to China or India at $1 per day how are you going to petition for additional income, even white collar work faces dim prospects for wage increases.
Say the world reduces it's purchase US securities and interest rates have to go up to attract foreign money? The foreign money is required to buy energy and manufactured goods from abroad.
Ouch suddenly 25%-35% of the US economy gambling on whether a line on a chart goes up or down does not look so comforting.
The US have some very unplesant medicine to swallow in that type of scenario.
If you take the hyperinflation scenario, who loses out? Mainly people who already hold significant sums of money. The people who are running the whole show. I think there is a greater chance of interest rate rises causing financial turmoil rather than the hyperinflation scenario.
But I agree with you on the proviso that really anything can happen.