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Financial Meltdown 101

By Arun Gupta, Indypendent. Posted October 13, 2008.


Everything you ever wanted to know about the biggest economic meltdown since the Great Depression but were afraid to ask.
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AlterNet is resurfacing some of the best and most popular articles published in 2008 as the year comes to a close. In this piece published this fall, Arun Gupta helps makes sense of these confusing economic times. 

From 1982 to 2000, the U.S. stock market went on the longest bull run ever, as share prices rose to dizzying heights. In the late 1990s, a combination of factors, which included the Federal Reserve lowering interest rates, created a huge price bubble in Internet stocks. A speculative bubble occurs when price far outstrips the fundamental worth of the asset. Bubbles have occurred in everything from real estate, stocks and railroads to tulips, beanie babies and comic books. As with all bubbles, it took more and more money to make a return*. This led to the Internet bubble popping in March 2000.

During this time of market mania, the Fed guts the Glass-Steagall Act, which was enacted during the Great Depression to prevent the type of banking activity that led to the 1929 stock market crash. In 1996, the Fed allows regular banks to become heavily involved in investment banking, which opens the door to conflicts of interest in banks pushing sketchy financial products on customers who poorly understood the risks. In 1999, under intense pressure from financial firms, Congress overturns Glass-Steagall, allowing banks to engage in any sort of activity from underwriting insurance to investment banking to commercial banking (such as holding deposits).

*For instance, if you purchased 100 shares of Apple at $10 a share and it rose to $20, it cost $1,000 to make $1,000 profit (a 100 percent return), but if the shares were $100 each and rose to $110, it would cost $10,000 to make $1,000 profit (a 10 percent return -- and the loss potential would be much greater, too.

Many Americans joined the stock mania literally in the last days and lost considerable wealth, and some, such as Enron employees, lost their life savings. When the stock market bubble erupted, turbulence rippled through the larger economy, causing investment and corporate spending to sink and unemployment to rise. Then came the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, generating a shock wave of fear and a drop in consumer spending. Burned by the stock market, many people shifted to home purchases as a more secure way to build wealth.

By 2002, with the economy already limping along, former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and the Fed slashed interest rates to historic lows of near 1 percent to avoid a severe economic downturn. Low interest rates make borrowed money cheap for everyone from homebuyers to banks. This ocean of credit was one factor that led to a major shift in the home-lending industry -- from originate to own to originate to distribute. Low interest rates also meant that homebuyers could take on larger mortgages, which supported rising prices.

In the originate-to-own model, the mortgage lender -- which can be a private mortgage company, bank, thrift or credit union -- holds the mortgage for its term, usually 30 years. Every month the bank* originating the mortgage receives a payment made of principal and interest from the homeowner. If the buyer defaults on the mortgage, that is, stops making monthly payments, then the bank can seize and sell a valuable asset: the house. Given strict borrowing standards and the long life of the loan, it's like the homebuyer is getting married to the bank.

*Shorthand for any mortgage originator.

In the originate-to-distribute model, the banks sell the mortgage to third parties, turning the loans into a commodity like widgets on a conveyor belt. By selling the loan, the bank frees up its capital so it can turn around and finance a new mortgage. Thus, the banks have an incentive to sell (or distribute) mortgages fast so they can recoup the funds to sell more mortgages. By selling the loan, the bank also distributes the risk of default to others.

The banks made money off mortgage fees, perhaps only a few thousand dollars per loan. Because they sold the loan, sometimes in just a few days, they had no concern that the homebuyer might default. Banks began using call centers and high-pressure tactics to mass-produce mortgages because the profit was in volume--how many loans could be approved how fast. This was complemented by fraud throughout the realestate industry, in which appraisers over-valued homes and mortgage brokers approved anyone with a pulse, not verifying assets, job status or income. And the mushrooming housing industry distorted the whole economy. Of all net job growth from 2002 to 2007, up to 40 percent was housing-sector related: mortgage brokers, appraisers, real-estate agents, call-center employees, loan officers, construction and home-improvement store workers, etc.

To make the loans easier to sell, the banks go to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac and get assurance for conforming (or prime mortgages*). Assurance means one of the agencies certifies that the loans are creditworthy; they also insure part of the loan in case the homeowner defaults. Before their recent nationalization, Fannie and Freddie were government-sponsored entities (GSEs). While anyone could buy shares in the two companies, they were also subject to federal regulation and congressional oversight. This federal role was seen as an implicit guarantee: While there was no explicit guarantee, all parties believed loans backed by Fannie and Freddie were absolutely safe because the government would not let the two agencies fail. This allowed them to borrow huge sums of money at extremely low rates.

*Prime refers to the credit score of the borrower.

Banks then sold their newly acquired assured prime mortgage loans to bundlers, ranging from Fannie and Freddie to private labels, such as investment banks, hedge funds and money banks (ones that hold deposits like savings and checking accounts. Bundlers pooled many mortgages with the intention of selling the payment rights to others, that is, someone else pays to receive your monthly mortgage payments.

The next step was to securitize the bundle (a security is a tradable asset. Much of the financial wizardry of Wall Street involves turning debts into assets. Say you're Bank of America and you sell 200 mortgages in a day. Lehman Brothers buys the loans after they are assured and bundles them by depositing the mortgages in a bank account -- that's where the monthly payments from the 200 homeowners go. Then, a mortgage-backed security (MBS) is created from this bundle. An MBS is a financial product that pays a yield to the purchaser, such as a hedge fund, pension fund, investment bank, money bank, central bank and especially Fannie and Freddie. The yield, essentially an interest payment, comes from the mortgage payments.

How does it work? The homeowner keeps making monthly mortgage payments to Bank of America, which makes money from the fees from the original mortgage and gets a cut for servicing the mortgage payments, passing them on to Lehman Brothers. Lehman makes money as a bundler of the mortgages and underwriter of the mortgage-backed security. The purchaser of the mortgage-backed security, say, Fannie Mae, then gets paid from the bank account holding the mortgage payments.

At first, this process covered only prime mortgages because Fannie and Freddie could not assure subprime loans. To address low rates of home ownership among low-income populations and communities of color, around 2004 Congress began encouraging Fannie and Freddie to start assuring subprime mortgages on a wide scale. And easy credit fed investors' appetite for more and more mortgage-backed securities, which provided funding for new mortgages.

One definition of subprime loans is any loan at an interest rate that is at least 3 percentage points more than a prime loan. Many of these loans were adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) with teaser rates. The rate was low for the first few years, but then it would reset, causing monthly payments to leap dramatically, sometimes to two or three times the original amount. Subprime borrowers are considered riskier to lend to because of low credit scores. Subprime borrowers are concentrated among people of color and immigrant and low-income communities, partly because racial and class disparities result in less access to banking services such as credit cards, online billing and checking and saving accounts. Bill paying becomes a labor-intensive process, making it much more likely that payments will be late or missed, driving down credit scores. With mortgage brokers and lenders pushing loans on anyone and everyone, those with less financial acumen -- disproportionately low-income people, immigrants, the elderly and communities of color -- often found themselves with mortgages that became unaffordable.

With the surge in mortgage loans, around 2004, banks started extensively using financial products called collateralized debt obligations (CDOs). The banks would either combine mortgage-backed securities they already owned or bundle large pools of high-interest subprime mortgages. CDOs were sliced into tranches -- think of them as cuts of meat -- that paid a yield according to risk of default: The best cuts, the filet mignon, had the lowest risk and hence paid the lowest yield. The riskiest tranches, the mystery-meat hotdogs that paid the highest yield, would default first if homebuyers stopped making payments. This was seen as a way to distribute risk across the markets. The notion of distributing risk means all the market players take a little risk, so if something goes bad, everyone suffers but no one dies.

Tranches were given ratings by services like Standard & Poor's, Moody's and Fitch. The highest rating, AAA, meant there was virtually no risk of default. The perceived safety of AAA meant a broad variety of financial institutions could buy them. And because tranches were marketed as a tool to fine-tune risk and return, this spurred a big demand. There was a conflict of interest, however, because the rating services earned huge fees from the investment banks. Moody's earned nearly $850 million from such structured finance products in 2006 alone. The investment bank also bundled lower-rated mortgage backed securities, like BBB -rated ones, and then sliced them to create new tranches rated from AAA to junk. This was like turning the hotdogs into steaks.

Furthermore, the banks would hedge the tranches, another way of distributing risk, by purchasing credit default swaps (CDSs) sold by companies like AIG and MBIA. The swaps were a form of insurance. This was seen as a way to make tranches more secure and hence higher rated. For instance, say you're Goldman Sachs and you have $10 million in AAA tranches. You go to AIG to insure it, and the company determines that the risk of default is extremely low so the premium is 1 percent. So you pay AIG $100,000 a year and if the tranche defaults, the company pays you $10 million. But CDSs started getting brought and sold all over the world based on perceived risk. The market grew so large that the underlying debt being insured was $45 trillion -- nearly the same size as the annual global economy!

Also around 2004, things began to get even trickier when investment banks set up entities known as structured investment vehicles (SIVs). The SIVs would purchase subprime MBSs from their sponsoring banks. But to purchase these MBSs, the structured investment vehicles needed funds of their own. So the SIVs created products called asset-backed commercial paper (short-term debt of 1 to 90 days). Asset-backed means it is backed by credit from the sponsoring bank. The SIVs then sold the paper, mainly to money market funds. In this way, the SIVs generated money to purchase the mortgage-backed securities from their bank. The SIVs made money by getting high yields from the subprime MBSs they brought, while paying out low yields to the money markets that purchased the commercial paper (profiting from a spread like this is known as arbitrage).

Wall Street's goal was to conjure up ways to make money while not encountering any liability. It was moving everything off-book to the SIVs to get around rules about leveraging. Banks, hedge funds and others leverage by taking their capital reserves -- actual cash or assets that can be easily turned into cash -- and borrowing many times against it. For instance, Merrill Lynch had a leverage ratio of 45.8 on Sept. 26. That means that if Merrill had $10 billion in the bank, it was playing around with $458 billion. The Federal Reserve is supposed to regulate reserves to limit the growth of credit, but the SIVs were one method to get around this rule. More leverage also meant more risk for the bank, however, because funds could disappear quickly if a few bets went bad. This is all part of what's called the Shadow Banking System, meaning it gets around existing regulations.

It was deregulation that led to the huge growth of the shadow banking system. In 2004 Wall Street successfully lobbied the Securities and Exchange Commission to loosen regulations on how much they could leverage against their capital reserves. This allowed the companies "to invest in the fast-growing but opaque world of mortgage-backed securities; credit derivatives, a form of insurance for bond holders; and other exotic instruments," according to the New York Times. The only real oversight left in place was self-policing by the investment banks themselves to determine if they were putting investors at risk.

 

 

The whole process worked as long as everyone believed housing prices would go up endlessly. This is a form of perceptual economics, one principle of which is that any widely held belief in the market tends to become a self-fulfilling prophecy. In the case of housing, homeowners took on ever-larger mortgages in the belief that prices would keep rising rapidly. Mortgage lenders believed the loans were safe because even if the homeowner defaulted, the mortgage holder would be left with a house that was increasing in price. Confidence in rising prices led the creators and purchasers of mortgage-backed securities to think these investments were virtually risk-free. This also applied to over-leveraging -- as long as there was easy credit and quick returns to be made, investors clamored for more mortgage-backed securities. And this applied to the money market funds that brought the paper from structured investment vehicles. As long as the money market funds had confidence in the system, they didn't cash out the commercial paper when it came due, but rolled it over at the same interest rates. This allowed the SIVs to mint money without posing any liabilities for their sponsoring banks.

This system kept the U.S. economy chugging along for years. For some 35 years, real wages have been stagnant for most Americans, but as house values skyrocketed over the last decade, many homeowners refinanced and cashed out the equity -- turning their homes into ATMs. For example, if you owed $200,000 on a mortgage but the house value rose to $300,000, you could potentially turn the $100,000 difference into cash by refinancing. By 2004, Americans were using home equity to finance as much $310 billion a year in personal consumption. This debt-driven consumption was the engine of growth.

U.S. over-consumption was balanced by over-production in many Asian countries. Countries like China, India, Taiwan and South Korea run large trade surpluses with the United States, which speeds their economic development. They invest excess cash in U.S. credit instruments ranging from corporate debt and MBSs to government bonds and bills. It's what economists call a virtuous cycle: we buy their goods, helping them develop, while they use the profits to buy our credit, allowing us to purchase more of their goods. But it's also unsustainable. A country cannot over-consume forever.

In the final stage of the housing bubble, fewer first-time buyers could afford traditional mortgages. Rising house prices required ever-larger down payments so subprime mortgages multiplied, as they often required little or no money down. From 2004 to 2006, nearly 20 percent of all mortgage loans were subprime loans. As the vast majority were adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs), this created a time bomb. The minute interest rates went up, the rates reset, and homeowners with ARMs were saddled with larger monthly payments.

Various factors combined to slow real-estate prices and deflate the bubble. Rising prices led to a building boom and oversupply of houses, everaccelerating prices meant more money brought smaller returns and, once again, the Fed played a role by raising interest rates. It was trying to stave off inflation, but given the proliferation of adjustablerate mortgages, it led to higher mortgage payments, pushing hundreds of thousands of homeowners into foreclosure.

Once the bubble started to leak, the process accelerated, turning the mania into a panic. First, the default spread to the structured debt instruments like collateralized debt obligations and mortgage-backed securities. The system of distributing risk failed. Securitization had spread across the entire financial system -- investment and money banks, pension funds, central banks, insurance companies -- putting everyone at risk. Because the finance sector had lobbied aggressively for decades to slash regulation, the lack of oversight amplified risk. As mortgage holders defaulted, mortgage-backed securities also began to default. The subprime funding conduit from Wall Street froze up, which led big mortgage lenders like Countrywide, New Century Financial and American Home Mortgage to go belly-up.

As panic set in, money market funds began to stop rolling over the commercial paper -- they wanted to cash it out. So SIVs now had to either call on their credit line from their sponsoring banks or sell assets such as the mortgage-backed securities to raise money. Mortgage defaults and forced sales of the MBSs began to push prices down even further. This forced banks to book losses, requiring some to sell more assets to cover the losses, further lowering prices, forcing them to book more losses, creating a vicious cycle. This is known as a liquidation trap. Since no one was sure about the size of the losses, banks began to hoard funds, which caused the credit markets to dry up.

Over the last year, the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury have taken increasingly drastic measures -- lowering interest rates, pumping cash into the banking sector, allowing investment banks to borrow funds while putting up low-valued securities as collateral. This then proceeded to financing takeovers, such as the Fed providing a $29 billion credit line for JP Morgan to take over Bear Stearns in March. Then it nationalized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac; this was followed by the federal takeover of AIG, which was done in by its gambling with credit default swaps. In the end, the legendary Wall Street banks disappeared in a fortnight -- bankrupt, acquired or converted into bank holding companies like Citigroup.

But the contagion has not been contained. Whether the bailout plan can succeed is highly questionable. Many are skeptical as to whether the bailout will even restore confidence -- and credit -- to the banking system. As Reuters stated recently, "Doubts remain as to how it [the bailout plan] could immediately thaw the frozen money and credit market." Even if the bailout revives the banking sector, few economists think it will jumpstart the consumer credit machine. For one, over-leveraged, money-strapped banks will eagerly dump nearworthless securities on taxpayers in exchange for cash to bulk up their reserves. Plus, with working hours and wages declining and unemployment, home foreclosures and inflation surging, banks are in no mood to give consumers more credit, so consumption -- and hence the economy -- will continue to contract.

 

There are many other, better options that were proposed: avoiding the poisonous mortgage-backed securities and buying equity stakes directly in troubled banks, re-regulating the industry, sending in teams of government auditors to decide the real worth of financial companies and which should live and die, creating a Home Owners' Loan Corporation to allow the government to buy troubled mortgages directly, allowing local governments to seize foreclosed homes and turn them into subsidized housing to minimize abandonment (which creates ghost neighborhoods, driving down the price of still-occupied homes), public works program, alternative energy investments, a Green New Deal. But these are political questions that depend on organizing and political power to propose, legislate, fund and enact. That's what will determine if there is a 21st-century New Deal or if Wall Street will get away with the biggest financial crime in world history.

Max Fraad Wolff consulted on and Michelle Fawcett contributed to this article. Illustrations By Frank Reynoso and color by Irina Ivanova. This article relied on many sources, including "The Subprime Debacle" by Karl Beitel, Monthly Review, May 2008. This essay was printed in the Oct. 3, 2008, issue of The Indypendent, and the November 2008 issue of Z Magazine.

 

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Arun Gupta is an editor of the Indypendent. He's writing a book about the decline of American Empire to be published by Haymarket Books.

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Very well written explanation
Posted by: skoog5600 on Oct 13, 2008 1:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you to the author of this very well written easy to understand debacle, no that is not strong enough, what is it that Jon Stewart says, oh yeah "Clusterf$%k to the poorhouse."

Really this should be required reading for every American so that these same kinds of mistakes won't get made again. But more importantly so that they don't continue to get fleeced by the greed that so corrupts the minds of the populace. Unfortunately, I don't hold out hope for most Americans (alternet readers excluded) that they will take the time to really understand what went wrong, and how they are just as much at fault as the system.

Why does everyone want to live beyond their mean? There needs to be a fundamental shift in the consciousness of America before anything really changes. I don't see it happening anytime soon, at least until the country truly hits bottom like an alcoholic or drug addict, then and only then will change truly occur.

Good luck!

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» It gets my seal of approval Posted by: Iconoclast421
FASCISM 101 = CRASH ...(by Organized Corporate Crime)
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Oct 13, 2008 1:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Interesting overview that lacks the core reason for our latest rigged crash in a series of boom-crash cycles.

The nation's economy is a planned "Keynesian" farce lorded over by a ruling class Ponzi scheme: a private Fascist bank monopoly better known as the "Federal Reserve" Corp (never federal and with minus ZERO reserves) that prints money out of thin air and charges the nation interest for it. This snake oil trap has been illegal and unconstitutional (article 1 section 8) since the "Fed" sting was hatched in 1913.

All of this is in service to a parasite of a Monopoly Organized Corporate Crime Regime that has been soaking the “masses” from before Karl Marx coined the hoax term “capitalism” that DID NOT EXIST when he invented the word (“capitalism” requires real competition and free, open markets that didn’t exist then and don’t exist now under essentially the same monopoly ruling class).

But the west’s economy based on a naked bunko con is but the foundation for the madness that has come home to roost.

The fact is America creates virtually NOTHING of real value other than Hollywood intellectual property and a bit of technology that amounts to a feeble share of what a “1st world” economy should produce. In the place of an industrial economy we have a paper recycling casino that creates gaming profits collected by ruling class Wall Street lackeys primarily out of New York and London (the Ponzi nerve centers of global financial and ruling class power).

At the head of this sham is the subprime and derivatives scam built on a “Federal Reserve” Corp bubble that Ben Bernanke, Goldman Sachs’ Hank Paulson, Alan Greenspan (whose doctorate work was based on housing bubbles) and all the rest have cooked.

Courtesy of Jim Sinclair, the trillions dollar derivatives “market” scandal:

1. Without regulation.
2. Without listing on public exchanges.
3. Without standards; not the least bit transparent; without an open market of the bid/ask type.
4. Dealt in by private treaty negotiations.
5. Without a clearinghouse
6. Unfunded without financial guarantee of any kind.
7. Functioning as contracts of specific performance.
8. Financial character or ability to perform is totally dependent on the balance sheet of the loser in the arrangement.
9. Evaluated by computer assumptions made by geeks, non-market experienced mathematicians who assume religiously that all markets return to their normal relationships regardless of disruptions.
10. Now in the credit and default category alone considered by accepted authorities as totaling more than USD$20 trillion in notional value.
11. Notional value becomes real value when the agreement is forced to find a real market for ending the obligation which is how one says sell it…


The latest series of deceptions came from Alan “Bubbles” Greenspan who kept recycling lies till he left office followed by Bernanke and Hank Paulson that put together their Wall Street “bailout” months ago when they were reassuring the naïve that:

“Our financial institutions are in a strong financial position, and our economic fundamentals are healthy…”
Hank Paulson (IMF meeting 10/20/07)

Gee, could these be words of a Fascist serving a corrupt old Fascist ruling class?

J.M. Keynes who crafted the World Bank and IMF for the Rockefellers produced similar a lie:

"We will not have any more crashes in our time."
John Maynard Keynes (economist credited with “Keynesian Economics” advocating centrally planned and controlled economy. Quote two years before the Great Depression. 1927)

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The Age of Positivity and Community is coming!
Posted by: thinkverybig on Oct 13, 2008 2:58 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is my goal to get in touch with someone from the Obama campaign and share with them my desire to be a part of his inauguration by reciting a poem I wrote called “We Must Change,” and I kindly ask for your help in doing so.
Go to youtube and do a search for "thinkverybig" and watch all of those videos. The one called "We Must Change" would be fitting to recite at Obama's Inauguration
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EM58nqX1ehE

Here are the words! http://www.thinkverybig.com/We%20Must%20Change.htm


"I Don't Understand" video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VN_pGy_1bEg

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I'm Afraid....
Posted by: CatDad on Oct 13, 2008 3:25 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...that this issue is too complex (complex in that it might involve having to READ for twenty minutes to understand it) for many voters.

The entire Right and the MSM seems to be peddling a different story and I'm afraid it's being believed: That the entire financial meltdown was caused by liberals who forced Fannie Mae give loans to poor (mostly of color) people who had previously been shut out of the mortgage market. The far right is adding their own embellishments...that this entire meltdown was caused by Barney Frank and his former gay lover at Fannie Mae. Frank is becoming a "Jane Fonda" type lightening rod/scapegoat figure for the Right.

The reality that their "free markets" might be a fairy tale like communism is simply too painful to comprehend. Mythologies must immediately be created counter reality. Yet, like "Enron," this financial collapse may be impossible to summarize in ten second soundbites...other than the "answer" of "Liberals and homosexuals and Fannie Mae" being peddled in 24/7 rotation in the MSM.

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» RE: Thats ok, Barney Frank Posted by: CatDad
» "low information" voters Posted by: xvictor
the difference is...
Posted by: ellie on Oct 13, 2008 4:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that the IMF and WTO put their foot down this weekend, and other countries, especially asian and eurpoean markets are working TOGETHER to find a way out of this mess that the US started...

the US is still doing the toss the garbage can against the wall method to see what sticks method...

and they think another round of free??? money checks will do the trick this time (again)... this is gonna be more then $700 bil, that was just the down payment kids...

just wish I has the one who cold cocked that guy from Leahman Bros in the gym, and that big party AIG had on OUR $$ complete with pedicures should have been a police sting with all attendees now in jail...

in a strange way, hope all the fed 'ideas' go bust before spending OUR MONEY... yup, still mad here about our tax $$ being used still to re-finance the rich and don't see that changing any time soon...

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oops, forgot to add...
Posted by: ellie on Oct 13, 2008 4:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
guess who has the most stable economy in the world right now??? one of the few non WTO-IMF players... answer: IRAN!!!

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» A glowing example Posted by: John Annis
In the olden days they just called it
Posted by: owlbear1 on Oct 13, 2008 4:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Counterfeiting.

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Melt-Down Is Neo-Cons' Economic 9-11-Well Planned Like 9-11
Posted by: 911FalseFlag on Oct 13, 2008 4:31 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just like in 2004, the Democratic presidential and vice presidential candidates are not being truthful about the fake war on terror, a false flag attack of 9/11, the scam of the Federal Reserve Bank and the easily hackable electronic voting machines and central tabulators.

The reason is that the Democrats have been completely complicit in all of the criminal actions and war crimes committed by Bush. If they blow the whistle, then they will be implicated.

Guess who the biggest campaign contributor to George W. Bush is? MBNA, a big credit card company. MBNA wrote the legislation that radically changed the bankruptcy laws in the US.
Predatory lending, which used to be the province of criminal loan sharks, is now the norm in the lending industry in the US.
Today's banking crisis is the THIRD trillion dollar plus US-caused financial meltdown in the last twenty years.
Each one of these crises came into being through the same basic mechanism...the fraudulent over-valuing of financial assets by Wall Street - with a "wink and a nod" (and sometimes a lot more) from the White House and Congress. The fraudulently valued assets stimulate the economy, impart the illusion of health and then, inevitably, the fraud goes too far and the whole house of card comes painfully crashing back to earth.
The White House stood in the way of any state prosecuting federal banks and mortgage companies for predatory lending. They actually used a portion of the enabling act creating the US Comptroller of the Currency to preempt the regulation and prosecution of these banks for fraudulent loan activities. This is why Eliot Spitzer was politically assassinated. He wrote an editorial in the Washington Post three weeks before his assassination accusing the White House of preventing any state Attorney General from prosecuting these criminal activities. Of course, the mainstream media did not report the actual reason that this politician’s sexual indiscretions were reported so immediately and excessively.

The mainstream media never reported on Bush planting in the White House press corps a gay escort, Johnny Gannon. Gannon based on the Secret Service records of visits to the White House visited the White House over 200 times and stayed overnight at least two times.

Go to my website, www.911insidejob.net and read many articles and watch videos on the well planned takedown of the US dollar by the Bush White House and the Federal Reserve Bank.

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USA COMPARED TO THE REST
Posted by: Bob Graham Las Vegas on Oct 13, 2008 4:55 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do and always have thought the USA was the best country in the world. Even since we have decided that our constitution no longer is good enough to follow to the letter, the USA is still best when compared to others. Our freedom of speech, though diminishing is still better when compared to others. Our right to bear arms although being highly infringed upon is better, when compared to others. Our economic structure though decidedly socialistic and slanted towards making the rich richer is better , when compared to others . Our freedom of religion though greatly diminished and highly distorted is better, when compared to others. Our standards of living though declining rapidly is better, when compared to others. Our infrastructure though in bad need of repair is better, when compared to others. Our schools and building blocks for our children is better, when compared to others. Our jobs and employment of the people is better, when compared to others. We have been lead along by our politicians and been told we are better when compared to others.

Something does not seem quite right when all we do is compare ourselves to others and leave behind the attitude of being the best we can be and measuring ourselves by none, rather making each successive day better than the day before . The days of following the best plan of freedom, "OUR CONSTITUTION" being all but gone completely, our jobs having been shipped out to other countries, engaging in wars for the sole sake of engaging in wars along with a host of other ideas sold to us as good for our country, leave me wondering. "Is it okay with everyone to be the best pile of manure in the pasture, or is it time for change?

"We in America do not have government by the majority. We have government by the majority who participate". ~Thomas Jefferson

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» You can have the "best" USA Posted by: sfortuna
» RE: You can have the "best" USA Posted by: richholland
» RE: You can have the "best" USA Posted by: richholland
» My country right or wrong? Posted by: donl51
RE: "Consumer spending determines the health of the economy"
Posted by: fearn on Oct 13, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whooooa, you actually believe that melpol???

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Mindboggling Stupidity
Posted by: tommy_slothrop on Oct 13, 2008 11:24 AM   
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Just what we need: more trash precursors and oil imports; more people wasting their lives doing unnecessary jobs; more wars.

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Maldistribution of Wealth and SPBW economic policies.
Posted by: bthespoon on Oct 13, 2008 6:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
SPBW stands for "Simlutaneous Parallel Backwards World".

Money trickles up, not down. If no one acts to counter-balance this fact, essentially all of our wealth eventually ends up in very few hands. Bush pushed the process into over-drive when he redistributed our wealth in precisely the wrong direction for the Good of the Whole, and the $700, no make that $840 billion "bail out" went to the top as well.

As long as no one understands the problem, we have no hope of it being solved.

Ironically nationalizing health coverage rather than socializing the credit industry would be the single best thing for our economy and our people. We would save hundreds of billions of dollars per year, and millions of innocent American lives from being destroyed.

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SAd
Posted by: RedFoxOne on Oct 13, 2008 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seems to me that during the "sub prime" days, bankers and brokers alike were getting filthy rich writing loans to anyone who applied and happily taking their commissions. Now that it has blown up in their faces, Main Street America is expected to, and HAS bailed them out. Pretty pathetic if you ask me.

Jiff
Online Privacy when it Counts

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FINALLY, a sum of it all. THANK YOU !
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 13, 2008 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I strongly recommend that people take this summary of America's DYSFUNCTIONALITY that's been going on for 3 decades and try to cooperate with those of us trying to undo the damage please.

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» wouldn't that be nice! Posted by: donl51
How We get Disaster capitalism
Posted by: wallisp on Oct 13, 2008 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The market will continue to fall until these big monied holders of OUR money can get pennies on the dollar for any of America's assets, that are left. Then we will all be poor, and they will be in total control of the country, and be super rich. The Disaster capitalists tried to pull off the same thing in Russia when Yelsin was in power. This sysytem of takeover was made possible by Milton Friedman, and he got a Nobel Peace prize for it, imagine that. It has been used over the last 35 years in Chile, Argentina, China, Russia. Millions have died in camps from torture, starvation, etc. Folks hold on to your ass, it will be all you hhave before long.

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Executive pay again....
Posted by: warrior woman on Oct 13, 2008 6:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As of this weekend, Paulsen plans on infusing money to buy preferred shares of bank stocks, therefore and with luck, shoring up the tanking economy and bolstering it for the future.

In today’s NY Times, White House Overhauling Rescue Plan, it stated, “Industry executives quickly told Mr. Paulson that they liked the idea, though they warned that the Treasury should not try to squeeze out existing shareholders. They also begged Mr. Paulson not to impose tough restrictions on executive pay and golden-parachute deals for executives who are fired.”

Any cash infusion should be predicated on a moratorium of bonus pay for all employees and any severance packages known as “golden parachutes”. In other words, rewrite the contracts as part of the deal. In addition, tough restrictions should be a part of the deals. Taxpayers do not deserve this program to begin with and sure shouldn’t end with such chicanery. No bonuses should be allowed for the past year’s performances nor any in the future until such time that the bank is standing on it’s own performance and not relying upon taxpayers to share in business of banking.

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» RE: xecutive pay again.... Posted by: JSquercia
The God That Failed: The 30-Year Lie of the Market Cult
Posted by: chlamor on Oct 13, 2008 7:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps the most striking fact revealed by the global financial crash -- or rather, by the reaction to it -- is the staggering, astonishing, gargantuan amount of money that the governments of the world have at their command.

In just a matter of days, we have seen literally trillions of dollars offered to the financial services sector by national treasuries and central banks across the globe. Britain alone has put $1 trillion at the disposal of the bankers, traders, lenders and speculators; and this has been surpassed by the total package of public money that Washington is shoveling into the financial furnaces of Wall Street and the banks. These radical efforts are being replicated on a slightly smaller scale in France, Germany, Italy, Russia and many other countries.

The effectiveness of this unprecedented transfer of wealth from ordinary citizens to the top tiers of the business world remains to be seen. It will certainly insulate the very rich from the consequences of their own greed and folly and fraud; but it is not at all clear how much these measures will shield the vast majority of people from the catastrophe that has been visited upon them by the elite.

Year after year, the ordinary citizens were told by their governments: we have no money to spend on your needs, on your communities, on your infrastructure, on your health, on your children, on your environment, on your quality of life. We can't do those kinds of things any more.

Of course, when talking amongst themselves, or with the believers in the think tanks, boardrooms -- and editorial offices -- the cultists would speak more plainly: we don't do those things anymore because we shouldn't do them, we don't want to do them, they are wrong, they are evil, they are outside the faith. But for the hoi polloi, the line was usually something like this: Budgets are tight, we must balance them (for a "balanced budget" is a core doctrine of the cult), we just can't afford all these luxuries, sorry about that.

Let's say it again: The money was there all along.
Money to build and generously equip thousands and thousands of new schools, with well-paid, exquisitely trained teachers, small teacher-pupil ratios, a full range of enriching and inspiring programs.

Money to revitalize the nation's crumbling inner cities, making them safe and vibrant places for businesses and families and communities to grow.

Money to provide decent, affordable and accessible health care to every citizen, to provide dignity and comfort to the elderly, and protection and humane treatment for the mentally ill.

Money to provide affordable higher education to everyone who wanted it and could qualify for it. Money to help establish and sustain local businesses and family farms, centered in and on the local community, driven by the needs and knowledge of the people in the area, and not by the dictates of distant corporations.

Money to strengthen crumbling infrastructure, to repair bridges, shore up levies, maintain roads and electric grids and sewage systems.

Money for affordable, workable public transport systems, for the pursuit of alternative sources of energy, for sustainable, sensible development, for environmental restoration.

Money to support free inquiry in science, technology, health and other areas -- research unfettered from the war machine and the drive for corporate profit, and instead devoted to the betterment of human life.

Money to support culture, learning, continuing education, libraries, theater, music and the endless manifestations of the human quest to gain more meaning, more understanding, more enlightenment, a deeper, spiritually richer life.

The money for all of this -- and much, much more -- was there, all along.

LINK

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» Which god is that? Posted by: donl51
» Bravo -- well said Posted by: nearblindjames
Too Much
Posted by: beautifulady2003 on Oct 13, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I got completely lost reading this article. I guess I'll never understand economics, nor do I care to. But one thing kept drumming through my mind through all of this - the word "racketeering."

What a racket - lending, borrowing, and redistributing imaginary money. Without anyone minding the store. No wonder it's such a mess.

The Bible and the Quran both speak against money lenders, gambling and the charging of interest. Now we know why this is supposed to be a sin.

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» RE: Too Much Posted by: donl51
What year was it?
Posted by: Last Chance on Oct 13, 2008 7:36 AM   
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According to the article, the Fed raised interest rates that burst the bubble. What year was that and who made that decision?

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Good Stuff
Posted by: Timberbee on Oct 13, 2008 7:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many, many more articles such as this one, please. While I do not yet completely understand this occurring crisis, I do feel that Some of the fog is lifting, and I am at least beginning to get a sense of the lay of the land. Inform us! Don't play to our fears, or our worst tendencies. We are made more able, as we are made more knowledgeable.

Wonderful Article

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» RE: Good Stuff Posted by: donl51
Admiring ACORN
Posted by: Urgelt on Oct 13, 2008 8:14 AM   
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Any effort as vast as ACORN's is bound to generate some errors. Humans are imperfect (some more than others). Knowing this, they screened and flagged those registrations which were suspicious before turning them in. Under the law, they had to turn all of them in. The law didn't require them to flag suspicious registrations, but they did it anyway. I cannot imagine how they could possibly be more responsible than that.

If our democracy is to have any chance of surviving, it will be because eligible voters shed their indifference and become involved. ACORN is helping to make that happen.

As for intimidating community bankers, that's a good thing, too. Banks were busily redlining entire districts and refusing to look within for eligible, reliable mortgagees. They deserved some intimidating. But ACORN did much more than intimidate. They helped those banks identify and vette good borrowers (and avoid bad ones). That was a service to the banks as well as to borrowers.

Those borrowers are not implicated in the current meltdown, and saying otherwise is pure disinformation. We know the real culprits: predatory lenders throwing ballooning mortgages at people with no money for down payments, inadequate income, and no clue what they were signing up for. (Had ACORN been involved for all of those clueless borrowers, I don't think it could have happened.) These "sub-prime" mortgages then were turned into derivatives and resold far and wide, and faux "insurance" was sold by the likes of Lehman without any capital reserves to back them up. Huge profits; huge risks. Now the dominoes are falling.

We can't lay the blame for any of that at ACORN's feet. They're heroes in my book.

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Wake Up America!
Posted by: tgranger on Oct 13, 2008 8:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We must get to the root of this thing to make a difference with it! Ever since World War II we have been fed the line by Madison Avenue that "WE NEED STUFF" to be happy, sexy, healthy, and nice smelling. We bought IT! Hook line and sinker and the consumer economy was born!
Congress allowed predatory lending practices in the credit card industry which allowed us to "GET THE STUFF WE NEED" before we produce the funds to acquire it. And no body noticed the effective cost of our acquistions after the interest and fees waere paid.
Then they sold us (and we bought) the old saw that the industrialists used to bribe immigrant labor to do desperate jobs to build the infrastructure of the Country! "Do this lousy job for 20 years and we will then take care of you for the rest of your life" (What they didn't say was your life will last an average of 6 months after you quit working!)
The retirement myth set the stage for the international banking community to accumulate over 75 trillion dollars in funds held for the benefit of those "retirment bound" working people and the push was to maximise the yield on those funds. Enter Greed!
Then the Neo-Cons dissolved regulation of the economy and suddenly there was a way for us all to get the money to pay off the credit cards used buy the STUFF we agree "we need" and put away funds for our "retirement". The Wall Street greed factor created more and more abstract investment vehicles to produce higher and higher yields (and fees to them) resting on greater and greater leverage ratios, while convincing more and more investors that their risk was spread wider and wider until the bubble finally burst. What's the source? We think we need stuff to be happy, alive, fullfilled and sexy; we think retirement is desireable, and we think that others can take away the risk of being alive. WAKE UP AMERICA!

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To those who think that "retiring debt" is a viable solution...
Posted by: lexicon on Oct 13, 2008 8:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's the "411" on what it all means: YOUR debt is the engine of growth for the financial industry.

Eliminate YOUR debt, and you've eliminated THEIR money.

Here's a hint: I personally, purchased a parcel of land for CASH, some few years ago. In doing so, my debt burden went way down, and my CREDIT RATING went way down too. In fact, it tanked.

When you buy something on credit,(debt), you create money for the financial industry to play with, and they reward you by calling you a "preferred customer". When you CANCEL debt (as I did by "failing" to take out a mortgage on the land, instead of buying outright) you REMOVE money from their system.

Our economy used to be based on WEALTH. Now, it is based on MONEY. Those are two different things. Related, but different.

By rights, the financial industry (the trading and management of money) should be sized at about ((( GDP * interest rate) * 2) + "30 day transactions value"). This would result in a financial system that performs it's vital role, of providing for the clearing of value transactions between holders of wealth. In such a world where this equation were 'honored', the basis of the economy would be the transacting of, and conversion of, wealth.

Instead, the financial industry is many times that size...I've seen estimates that it's 40% of our GDP. what that means, is that instead of representing the movement of money to transact WEALTH, it is involved in the movement of MONEY to transact MORE MONEY.

See..."wealth" is tangible, physical stuff. It's "nouns". stuff you own or have. Trees on your land, minerals in the earth. The ability you have to work or create. The FUTURE ability you have to work or create. That's REAL WEALTH.

Money...money is not a "noun" thing...it's a "verb" thing. It's a FLOW. it's a transition of wealth between one state and the next. It DOESN'T REALLY EXIST. If you have 'wealth', you can say, "I have a CAR." If you have 'money', you would have to say, "I have a 50 miles-per-hour." The existence of MONEY happens when you put a unit of wealth "into play" in the economy.

...the problem is the movement of the economy away from "real" wealth, and toward "fake" wealth, or money.

Why does that matter? well, it's pretty simple. Even though money isn't "real", it DOES have some real characteristics. As a placeholder value for a wealth transaction, it represents the transactional value of that wealth transaction. If money itself becomes "worthless" (which is where we are headed), then the effect is, that the whole process of wealth transactions become "mis-calibrated", and mis-calibration means that arbitrage exists...and those who are positioned to take advantage of arbitrage (the very rich) will be able to consolidate and expand their holdings of real wealth (regardless of the value of the money), compared to those who are NOT in a position to arbitrage...who will lose ground.

In other words, the "financial bubble" will result inevitably in a wealth transfer up the chain. Happens in every depression.

High volatility in the value of money means real wealth will be stripped from the lower economic players, and conversely, high stability in the value of money results in the growth of real wealth in the lower economic tiers.

lexicon

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throw $$ at it worldwide...
Posted by: ellie on Oct 13, 2008 8:43 AM   
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seems to be the news of today... DOW is up almost 500 points since the fed removed all restrictions on who gets what $$ and how over the weekend including foreign investors...

now that the toothpaste is out of the tube, wonder how long this will last before the elite totally siphon out the fed... or is it time to fire up the press and print more dollars with nothing to back it up??? the power elite will bleed it dry and say, too bad, suck it up...

now it's not just propping up the american economy with funny money, but the world... horrible part of this is that our kids and grandkids will get stuck with the bill...

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One Essential part that is missing
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Oct 13, 2008 8:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is important to understand that our financial markets have been gamed constantly over the last few decades. It's all gamed. So you cant just look at the sheer absurdities of all these SIVs and CDOs and MBSs and say "no wonder it collapsed". That mentality would simply lead you to have predicted it would collapse in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006. In other words, you'd end up being another boy who cried wolf every year, and then no one would listen. Certainly that is a part of what caused this. That's where peak oil comes in.

From 2005 up until now, global oil production has been peaking, or plateauing. It hasnt yet declined, but it hasnt grown to meet expectations. That is what caused the bubble to pop. It is extremely important to understand the fact that IF oil production kept increasing since 2005, instead of plateauing, then there would have been more energy available to the economy, which means more supply, and lower energy prices. Which means less mortgage defaults, more discretionary spending, the whole ball of wax. It's all about energy. But that part of it gets very little mention.

All the banking regulation in the world is not going to produce more energy. And in fact, if it were not for this alphabet soup of financial wizardry, the market and the economy would have imploded about 2-2.5 years ago. All that financial wizardry was the bankers solution to peak oil, to keep the bubble floating for as long as possible.

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Where was your Congressional representation
Posted by: SlyGuy on Oct 13, 2008 9:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...when the lights went out? Answer: in bed of course, with the finance industry. Did any of those with the responsibility to ensure the commonwealth against all such chicanery have the slightest idea how all this would work? Did they have any interest in upholding the public trust? Some did, most didn't. They don't even write or read the legislation anymore, you know. The lobbyists do.

We need more articles like this, and the 60 Minutes episode from Oct. 5 explaining in layman's terms such oddities as "credit default swaps." If you haven't seen it, do it now. There is no excuse for people who respond to these articles with comments like, "Gee, I just can't understand all this stuff. It's beyond me." Guess what, if it is beyond you, a few days of reading and perusing objective sources will give you some clues. That is, unless you are transfixed by sports and dancing with has-beens TV shows. Abdicate your responsibility just because others have? Re-read Thomas Paine.

Another must read: Empire of Debt.

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Corrections
Posted by: MartianBachelor on Oct 13, 2008 9:38 AM   
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In the late 1990s, a combination of factors, which included the Federal Reserve lowering interest rates, created a huge price bubble in Internet stocks. (pg 1)

The easy money era began at the end of 1994. That was when the I-Net stock bubble started. One can see this clearly on a 25-year chart of the S&P 500 index.

Greenspan's famous "irrational exuberance" speech was made two years later, in December 1996, even though it was his policy which had created the bubble (stocks up 65-70% already), seeing as how the money injected into the system starts out in the New York money centers, and so naturally a certain percentage of it finds its way into the stock market. The markets would more than double again in the 3+ years following the speech as the easy money policies of the Fed continued.

During this time of market mania, the Fed guts the Glass-Steagall Act... (pg 1)

I had problems with this entire paragraph. First, the Fed had no such power to "gut" the act. Second, yes it was Congress which repealed many of the key provisions, in 1999. That part's right. But it's not quite right to blame this just on "intense pressuring" from the financial industry, since Congress is always being strongly lobbied by virtually every industry.

In fact, the financial industry had been working for more than a dozen years on this -- just like it took the better part of a decade to get the bankruptcy laws changed in their favor (with Joe Biden being the big supporter of that bill in the Senate - he voted for it four times - and thus making it respectable for D's to go along.)

The vote on the final bill in 1999 was 362-57-15 vote in the House and 90-8-1 in the Senate. So it's not like this was a Republican bill which the Democrats fought long and hard against. In fact, Clinton's Treasury Secretaries, Rubin and Summers, who are now Obama's economic advisers, were in favor of the deregulatory 'reforms', and thus Clinton signed the bill.

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making money
Posted by: cbishopp on Oct 13, 2008 9:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some people might have a hard time grasping this article not because they are not smart enough but because the language of economics is designed to confuse. Once you read through the article you come to see that all it is are acronyms and misleading labels. This is wealth fabrication.
Here is how your money is created...(partially excerpted from Freerepublic.com but there are many sources)
The first fact that needs to be considered is that our money today has no gold or silver behind it whatsoever. The fraction is not 54% nor 15%. It is 0%. It has traveled the path of all previous fractional money in history and already has degenerated into pure fiat money. The fact that most of it is in the form of checkbook balances rather than paper currency is a mere technicality; and the fact that bankers speak about "reserve ratios" is eye wash. The so-called reserves to which they refer are, in fact, Treasury bonds and other certificates of debt. Our money is pure fiat through and through.
The second fact that needs to be clearly understood is that, in spite of the technical jargon and seemingly complicated procedures, the actual mechanism by which the Federal Reserve creates money is quite simple. They do it exactly the same way the goldsmiths of old did except, of course, the goldsmiths were limited by the need to hold some precious metals in reserve, whereas the Fed has no such restriction.

In a booklet entitled "Modern Money Mechanics", the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago says:

In the United States neither paper currency nor deposits have value as commodities. Intrinsically, a dollar bill is just a piece of paper. Deposits are merely book entries. Coins do have some intrinsic value as metal, but generally far less than their face amount.

What, then, makes these instruments -- checks, paper money, and coins -- acceptable at face value in payment of all debts and for other monetary uses? Mainly, it is the confidence people have that they will be able to exchange such money for other financial assets and real goods and services whenever they choose to do so. This partly is a matter of law; currency has been designated "legal tender" by the government -- that is, it must be accepted.

In the fine print of a footnote in a bulletin of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, we find this surprisingly candid explanation:

Modern monetary systems have a fiat base -- literally money by decree -- with depository institutions, acting as fiduciaries, creating obligations against themselves with the fiat base acting in part as reserves. The decree appears on the currency notes: "This note is legal tender for all debts, public and private." While no individual could refuse to accept such money for debt repayment, exchange contracts could easily be composed to thwart its use in everyday commerce. However, a forceful explanation as to why money is accepted is that the federal government requires it as payment for tax liabilities. Anticipation of the need to clear this debt creates a demand for the pure fiat dollars
Part of this crisis rests in the fact that "the SIVs created products called asset-backed commercial paper (short-term debt of 1 to 90 days). Asset-backed means it is backed by credit from the sponsoring bank. The SIVs then sold the paper, mainly to money market funds." In other words they minted money, creating value from nothing backed by credit.
Textbooks on banking often state that money is created out of debt. This is misleading because it implies that debt exists first and then is converted into money. In truth, money is not created until the instant it is borrowed. It is the act of borrowing which causes it to spring into existence. And, incidentally, it is the act of paying off the debt that causes it to vanish.

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lest you come to believe that the 'Gold Bugs' are right about money...
Posted by: lexicon on Oct 13, 2008 10:24 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In many ways, gold-based currency is just another form of fiat.

"fiat" currency means "It's money because we SAY it is".

Now, "money" isn't real. It comes into being as a way to consummate a transaction of WEALTH.

The amount of Money that's floating around at any given time is the amount of VALUE of the wealth transactions occurring in that time period. (transactions may not "clear" instantaneously..they may take months to "settle").

If money is based on gold...then the size of the money supply is NOT based on how much wealth is being transacted, instead the size of the money supply is based on how much gold we've managed to dig up and put in a vault somewhere.

So, you can see, a gold-standard currency, really is a completely arbitrary thing. It is MUCH more "real" to base money on the transacting of wealth (i.e. GDP) than on some arbitrary amount of metal sitting in a vault.

Now, the place that the gold-bugs ARE right, though...is when you start creating money, not by transferring wealth, but by playing shell games with that money...then you have a serious problem.

So, the problem isn't that we went off the "gold standard"...the problem is that the currency needs to be indexed very rigorously to wealth. When we had a gold-based currency, it was just naturally indexed...to an artificial measure of wealth, the amount of gold. But the problem wasn't leaving gold behind...it was that we didn't quite understand what gold provided...that RIGOROUS index to wealth. Without that index (or, "peg"), we find the currency flailing around, acting unpredictably.

Banks, subject to strict reserve requirements (the RIGOROUS INDEX TO WEALTH), function quite well in creating our currency for us. But greed steals in, as it will, and banks have figured out how to use loopholes and cracks and crannies in the regulations.

If you subvert the regulations or deregulate any part of the banking system, you are DE FACTO relinquishing control of the currency, and removing it's relationship to actual wealth.

lexicon

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» Solid reasoning Posted by: Last Chance
Not the Reason
Posted by: websmith on Oct 13, 2008 11:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nice essay on the mortgage crisis, but the economic collapse has been in the works for a long time. The Fed has continually pushed for quasi-deregulation in many industries in the name of free enterprise when all that it actually did was create opportunities for the banks to loan money. Many once healthy industries have been destroyed. The real problem with the housing bubble was that it was created with no demand.

http://ewebsmith.com/finance/thecause.html

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Making sense of it all
Posted by: richard0a37 on Oct 13, 2008 12:08 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like many people, I have followed the gradually unfolding crisis with great interest, but I must confess that I still do not understand what is going on. Hopefully, people will read this and comment.

Suppose you buy a car for £20,000 using your own money. You insure it. The premium is £400 payable in monthly instalments of £35 per month. A month later, you crash it, it gets written off, so the insurance company pays you your £20,000 less a bit for depreciation.

Ok. You started with £20,000, but now you have only got, say £19,500.

Suppose, however, you insured the vehicle with say, 20 insurance companies. To each, you pay in the first month (35 x 20) = £700. When you write the car off, they each pay you £19,500 which means you get back (19,500 x 20) = £390,000. Thus, you have made a profit of £370,000.

Ah, but you can't do that. You can't insure your car with more than one insurance company.

The bank lends you £100,000 so you can buy your house. Nice house too!

The bank lends a million people £100,000. That's still only £100 billion however you try to cook the figures.

So where's the catch?

The literature talks about slicing up and bundling up the mortgages, whatever that means.

This is what I think has happened. As with my example of bogus car insurance, lots of financial organisations ended up insuring the SAME bundles of property many times over.

And my guess is that the rule that the same car cannot be insured more than once (or at least you couldn't claim on the same vehicle more than once), well this rule somehow got overlooked where the mortgages were concerned.

Thus, you have one mortgage for £100,000. But if you were clever enough to get 20 companies to insure that same house, then someone (i.e. the original mortgage lender) stands to make £2 million per mortgage, which for the whole lot would be £2 trillion.

Also, I seem to recall somewhere that it is possible to insure a property that you don't own. Thus, if the reference entity (the guy living in the house) stops paying his monthly payments, then lots of organisations then owe the original lender (ie the bank) a big wadful.

Does any of this make sense to anyone, or am I wide of the mark?

Confused.

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This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
test
Posted by: Tana Ganeva on Oct 13, 2008 12:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
test

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" ... Only an Expert can deal with the PRoblem... "
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Oct 13, 2008 1:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
.
.
.
. . . " ... if there's no Expert there's really twice the PRoblem...
...but if you're not an Expert, you're not gonna make up a very plausible PRoblem...
"

"Only An Expert" - from Laurie Anderson "HomeLand" 2008 release with french subtitles

"Basel II comes knocking: "IMF finally knocks on Uncle Sam's door"

"How New Global Banking Rules Could Deepen the U.S. Crisis" - by Peter Coy

"There is no WE in corruption"

ITS A resource & sovereignty 'Prisoners' Dilemma' FIRESALE!!! Start Talking Free Trade Deal with India: CEOs - Embassy

Protectionism v. Exposure-ism-- The Realities of "Free Trade" In An Undemocratic World
By Kent Welton

SPP WATCH

"Integrate This! is about challenging the Security & Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP), an executive-level pact between the governments & corporate sectors of Canada, the United States & Mexico, which has never been debated publicly or voted on in any of the three countries. There are over 300 initiatives in the SPP aimed at harmonizing North American policies on food, drugs, security, immigration, manufacturing, the environment & public health.

As well as regular SPP updates, the site is full of reports, interviews & multimedia presentations critical of what's often called the "deep integration" of North America. News updates will be posted here regularly & archived into the seven categories...
"


Spread Love, not corporate dependence...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
~~~
"... tolerance of intolerance is cowardice..." ~ Ayaan Hirsi Ali.
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
"Violence can only be concealed by a Lie, & the Lie can only be maintained by Violence." ... "Any man who has once proclaimed violence as his method is inevitably forced to take the lie as his principle" – Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn "
Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"

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how to make money off the other guy
Posted by: richard0a37 on Oct 13, 2008 1:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. you feed the guys with the money that every things gonna be wonderful.

2. you visit your local stock exchange where trading is about to begin at 9 am.

3. 9.00 am, the rich guys buy, buy, buy. This drives the price up.

4. At 9.55, when the prices are sky high, you sell, sell, sell.

5. At 10.00 the real news is then broadcast. The future is going to be crap, crap, crap.

6. 10.01: 'Aw shit, we gotta sell, sell, sell,' says the rich guys (who won't be for much longer)

7. 10.55: When prices are rock bottom, you buy, buy, buy.

8. 12.00 and time to settle up. Since you sold when the price was sky high, but bought when the prices were rock bottom, you made a fantastic killing considering you walked into the building with zip.

The rich guys on the other hand, well, they sold when the prices were coming tumbling down, but bought when the prices were high.

Last Friday when Lehman Brothers were under the hammer, the DOW index spiked 17 times.

I wonder why.

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The route of all money
Posted by: richard0a37 on Oct 13, 2008 2:29 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's a little thought....

The treasury gives your employer £1.

He passes that £1 to you as salary.

No he doesn't

He gives 12% to the National Insurance and 22% to the Treasury, er I mean, the Inland Revenue.

So that leaves you with 66p.

You then give that 66p to the shopkeeper. He gives 17.5% VAT to the Treasury, er I mean the customs and excise. The remaining 54p he gives as salary to his assistant.

No he doesn't. He gives 12% to the NI and 22% tax to the IR leaving approx 36p.

It doesn't take too much imagination to calculate that over time, and every time money changes hands, virtually the entire 100% of the original £1 will ultimately find its way back into the government coffers.

So, what is the point in the government making us pay income tax. Since it all ultimately finds its way back to them anyway, it seems to me to be an absolutely and futile thing to do.

And since the Bank of England and all the other central banks are empowered to create money out of thin air, what is the point in restricting people's spending power by imposing income tax when the governments get it back regardless, simply because of VAT?

We're told that without income tax, we would not have any essential services, but that's bullshit. The billions of pounds and dollars etc that have changed hands over the past few weeks could have paid for all our essential service a hundred times over, and with money to spare.

The system is insane beyond belief. This is turning into the most expensive horse race ever. The stock market does nothing but bet on the horses every day. Spend a couple of hours in the evening watching Bloomberg TV, and you'll soon discover that the entire world economy is nothing but a bunch of numbers that the money boys obsess over whether they will go up or down. If they guess right, they make a fortune, and if they guess wrong, well they just lose their premium.

The BBC News and all the other news agencies, alas, feed the population with bullshit and misrepresentation. They only ever tell half the story. They're happy when the figures go up, miserable when the figures go down.

Tonight they said the Government has borrowed all those billions to give to bloody HBOS, RBS and all the other sheister bleedin banks.

Who have they borrowed it from? Rockerfeller, Rothschild?

This is the thing - the Governments of the World, the elected Governments should NOT HAVE TO BORROW MONEY. We need Governments to support the population, not to be blackmailed by a few psychopathic, but exceedingly clever individuals.

If I was a genie with magical powers, this is what I would do. To every individual on this planet who desires to do a task or job that seeks to benefit society as a whole, I would replenish their bank accounts every week so that they would never go into debt.

To every individual who seeks to make a quick buck off his neighbour, or who in some way wishes to exploit, I would incarcerate him in the New York stock exchange and build a tall wall around it. They could then play their silly little games and they could look at the silly little numbers on their silly little screens to their heart's content, but it would all be with monopoly money, and they would never see the light of day.

That's my thought for the day......

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Time was that a corporation that misbehaved could
Posted by: Koondog on Oct 13, 2008 11:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
have its charter revoked and be disbanded. It was like the death penalty for a corporation. However, in 1886 the Supreme Court ruled that corporations have, basically, all the rights of an individual corporeal person, but none of the corresponding responsibilities. As a result, corporations can, and do, get away with murder and robbery and will continue to do so until the public wises up to what is going on and reins them in. A corporation must put the making of profits for the shareholders above all its other obligations. It doesn't take much of an imagination to see where this might not be in the best interests of the public, the country or the planet. In reality, a corporation doesn't really exist, though, it's just a bunch of agreements that allow individuals, who sometimes are not well intentioned, the screw people over with no risk of retribution. Witness the news of the past month. How absurd is this?!!!! An entity that doesn't really exist can create havoc in people's lives yet cannot be held culpable. (cue music) "And I say to myself, what a wonderful world."

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good grief. greed over-extended? duh?
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Oct 13, 2008 11:42 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Too many greedy people who couldn't afford a home wanted one...who went to too many greedy banks that wanted to lend money they didn't have that gave them loans...backed by too many (stupid people in) greedy government brokerage firms (fanny/freddie) who didn't bother to do diligence on those loans...that sold them to greedy investors that believed that putting their money in gamble was a sure thing.

You know, being stupid and greedy has a price. Unfortunately, the average American--96% of whom pay their home bills or own their houses--are being asked to bail out you greedy, stupid, awful bums who never intended to pay for what your greed drove you to doing, by your own choice.

You greedy, stupid, bums are costing us our future, and all our childrens' future.

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I JUST CALLED BIDENS OFFICE - Seems like the ulimate economic storm to me.
Posted by: cori on Oct 16, 2008 1:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I asked how are we the people going to pay for 761 bases + all the permanent bases in Iraq, + 2 wars, + all the billions in giveaways to the drug companies, health insurance companies and all the other corporations we are giving billions to? Including our prison system that is a new growth industry. Added to this is the latest trillion dollar military budget, the cost of the bailout and the foreclosure of homes that will have an economic ripple effect on towns and states as revenues fall. Also we are faced with a 53 trillion dollar deficit that is compounding interest every day. This is bigger then all deficits combined in history. All this is happening as food and oil prices are at record highes. Wages are low and millions of jobs have been lost! And as the US is sitting on the 2nd biggest oil deposit in the world in Iraq, they now want to give the oil companies more billions to build oil riggs that will only pump a small fraction of the oil we need and not for 10 years while oil companies are making record profit at the pump! Added to all this mind boggling spending is all the aid we are giving to other nations and the huge tax cuts for the very wealthy. I am telling you Bush and his gang along with McCain, a professed Neo Con, and the GOP have bankrupted this nation and as we are still paying into our most vital social safety nets, Social Security and Medicare which they have already cut by 40% as we are paying for it, they want to take that away from us too and make us invest in their lousy stock market! When just raising the caps on Social Secuirty would secure it. This would mean that people making over $90,000 per year will have to pay their fair share like the rest of us. Maybe they should cut back on military spending and all the big giveways and make us the priority for a change? 70% of our economy was based on consumer spending. Well that will be history in no time. They talk about not raising taxes but what do you think a 53 trillion dollar deficit and everything mentioned above is? If you connect the dots I think what is coming will make the great depression look good.

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to the person who thought the economy could be saved if the horders stopped hording:
Posted by: using on Oct 16, 2008 6:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
lets make a distinction between the big horders...the ones for whom the trickle down was created and to whom McCain wants to give more tax cuts: THERE IS NO WAY most of them COULD LIVE LONG ENOUGH or spend it fast enough to repair this economy.

as for the little horders: well, some of us , after a life time of hard work, raising a family, are pensionless and have to live off the interest of our money. We cannot afford to spend it down because we are fearful of ending up homeless or dependent. Also, we have to be careful since even if we can afford long term insurance, they might, after receiving years of payments drop everyone's policy or not cover a a particular person's needs.

I am sorry you are so angry. I, like you am doing the best I can to take care of my needs.
Your anger is misplaced on me. As a matter of fact, displaced anger is exactly what those causing these problem count on to protect them from us.

Oh and do you realize that we, the savers who tried so hard to protect ourselves by denying ourselves many special things that others who will be living off the state enjoyed, are in jeopardy of being the next victims. Remember that $250,000 fdic insurance that they just upped -- well it is only good till 12/09 but then who is telling? the newspapers? the tv? the bankers?
Oh and if you think that $250,000 is alot of money....lets calculate: 1% is $2,500 for the year....5% is $12,500. How is that for a years income..how much frivolous spending do you think that will buy?

We need to restructure our society -- to protect people. Information should not be used to trick people out of what they have earned. Rommy said when he was running, "You don't want to take it away from others?" Well, I would like to know why the others he is referring to are so willing to take it away from us? It is time for us to begin to demand transparency so we can protect ourselves against insider plotting or stupidity.

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Best on meltdown!
Posted by: David H on Oct 25, 2008 9:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You guys take half Krugman's reward! (sp)

I don't want to add anything of my own other than, sure, I'd like to see a few graphics explaining how mortgage payments (coming in) effect CDO instrument values, etc. And then a few on how CDSs are bought and paid for...details...the kind no one wants to take the time to relate. The whole thing doesn't seem real to most of us; that's why I wager people won't embark on learning how we got ripped off (which is real).

Otherwise...I've been looking for an article like this for months. Luckily, I Googled into it. These creators are the masters. PC graphics are the most untapped resource (educational) that exists. Good beginning!

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