Economics Professor Nouriel Roubini summed it up like this nearly a month ago:
“The United States has now effectively entered into a serious and painful recession. The debate is not anymore on whether the economy will experience a soft landing or a hard landing; it is rather on how hard the hard landing recession will be. The factors that make the recession inevitable include the nation's worst-ever housing recession, which is still getting worse; a severe liquidity and credit crunch in financial markets that is getting worse than when it started last summer; high oil and gasoline prices; falling capital spending by the corporate sector; a slackening labor market where few jobs are being created and the unemployment rate is sharply up; and shopped-out, savings-less and debt-burdened American consumers who — thanks to falling home prices — can no longer use their homes as ATM machines to allow them to spend more than their income. As private consumption in the US is over 70% of GDP the US consumer now retrenching and cutting spending ensures that a recession is now underway.
On top of this recession there are now serious risks of a systemic financial crisis in the US as the financial losses are spreading from subprime to near prime and prime mortgages, consumer debt (credit cards, auto loans, student loans), commercial real estate loans, leveraged loans and postponed/restructured/canceled LBO and, soon enough, sharply rising default rates on corporate bonds that will lead to a second round of large losses in credit default swaps. The total of all of these financial losses could be above $1 trillion thus triggering a massive credit crunch and a systemic financial sector crisis.” ( Nouriel Roubini Global EconoMonitor)
Decades of stagnant wages have left the American worker hamstrung and unable to continue to account for 25% of global consumption. Tightening credit and lack of personal savings have only added to his problems. The American consumer is tapped-out. That means that aggregate demand will fall dramatically across the world triggering increases in unemployment, decreases in capital expansion, and widespread slowdown in business activity. These are the beginnings of a deflationary spiral that will wipe out trillions of dollars of market capitalization in the real estate, equities and bonds markets. Even gold and oil will retreat significantly. (as we saw in Monday's results)
The present crisis is not the result of normal market forces, but price fixing at the Federal Reserve and the financial engineering of the main investment banks. If there had been sufficient regulation of the activities of the Central Bank, so that interest rates had not been kept below the rate of inflation for over 31 months straight (under Greenspan) than the trillions of dollars in low-interest credit would not have flooded the real estate market, igniting a frenzy of speculative home-buying and creating the biggest housing bubble in US history. Despite his feeble excuses, Greenspan's role in destroying the US economy is no longer in doubt. Even the far-right Op-ed page of the Wall Street Journal conceded Greenspan's culpability in Saturday's edition. Here's what they said:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article19126.htm
Note: http://www.informationc...

Perahps another "splendid little war" is in order....?
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"When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change."
-Max Planck
The spin doctors have been working over time to make up a reason to attack Iran. Fortunately, Russia and China are backing up Iran, so a war seems very unlikely and apparently enough investors know this too and have bailed out.
Bush's puppet masters bet the whole farm on a couple of nasty wars - and lost. Now it's time to pay up. They don't have enough willing fodder to kick off much else, and their legions of autonomous killing robots are still in the fantasy stage.
The Strangelove-philes (aka "Rapture" adherents) might well "go for it" anyway:<br />
<a href="http://www.religioustolerance.org/rapture.htm">http://www.religioustolerance.org/rapture.htm</a><br />
<p>---<br>"When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change." <br />
-Max Planck<br />
<br />
pessimism about the economy,” reportedly saying that “the first 6 months of this
yr will be “bad.” He also suggested that “there is better than a 50-50 chance for
a recession” & believes the ensuing recovery will be “weak.”
...I any other country, in any other period of history these Bush & the neocons
would have been "purged". LOL. Western civilization is being dragged down by
these idiots. Welcome to the dark ages, 21st century style.