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mhgaffney
02-04-2010, 04:33 AM
No, according to Paul Craig Roberts:

February 3, 2010

The Second Wave

The Crisis is Not Over

By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

www.Counterpunch.org

Is the financial crisis over? Is the recovery for real and, if not, what are Americans’ prospects? The short answer is that the financial crisis is not over, the recovery is not real, and the U.S. faces a far worse crisis than the financial one. Here is the situation as I understand it:

The global crisis is understood as a banking crisis brought on by mindless deregulation of the U.S. financial arena. Investment banks leveraged assets to highly irresponsible levels, issued questionable financial instruments with fraudulent investment grade ratings, and issued the instruments through direct sales to customers rather than through markets.

The crisis was initiated when the U.S. allowed Lehman Brothers to fail, thus threatening money market funds everywhere. The crisis was used by the investment banks, which controlled U.S. economic policy, to secure massive subsidies to their profits from a taxpayer bailout and from the Federal Reserve. How much of the crisis was real and how much was hype is not known at this time.

As most of the derivative instruments had never been priced in the market, and as their exact composition between good and bad loans was unknown (the instruments are based on packages of securitized loans), the mark-to-market rule drove the values very low, thus threatening the solvency of many financial institutions. Also, the rule prohibiting continuous shorting had been removed, making it possible for hedge funds and speculators to destroy the market capitalization of targeted firms by driving down their share prices.

The obvious solution was to suspend the mark-to-market rule until some better idea of the values of the derivative instruments could be established and to prevent the abuse of shorting that was destroying market capitalization. Instead, the Goldman Sachs people in charge of the U.S. Treasury and, perhaps, the Federal Reserve as well, used the crisis to secure subsidies for the banks from U.S. taxpayers and from the Federal Reserve. It looks like a manipulated crisis as well as a real one due to greed unleashed by financial deregulation.

The crisis will not be over until financial regulation is restored, but Wall Street has been able to block re-regulation. Moreover, the response to the crisis has planted seeds for new crises. Government budget deficits have exploded. In the U.S. the fiscal year 2009 federal budget deficit was $1.4 trillion, three times higher than the 2008 deficit. President Obama’s budget deficits for 2010 and 2011, according to the latest report, will total $2.9 trillion, and this estimate is based on the assumption that the Great Recession is over. Where is the U.S. Treasury to borrow $4.3 trillion in three years?

This sum greatly exceeds the combined trade surpluses of America’s trading partners, the recycling of which has financed past U.S. budget deficits, and perhaps exceeds total world savings.

It is unclear how the 2009 budget deficit was financed. A likely source was the bank reserves created for financial institutions by the Federal Reserve when it purchased their toxic financial instruments. These reserves were then used to purchase the new Treasury debt. In other words, the budget deficit was financed by deterioration in the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve. How long can such an exchange of assets continue before the Federal Reserve has to finance the government’s deficit by creating new money?

Similar deficits and financing problems have affected the EU, particularly its financially weaker members. To conclude: the initial crisis has planted seeds for two new crises: rising government debt and inflation.

A third crisis is also in place. This crisis will occur when confidence is lost in the U.S. dollar as world reserve currency. This crisis will disrupt the international payments mechanism. It will be especially difficult for the U.S. as the country will lose the ability to pay for its imports with its own currency. U.S. living standards will decline as the ability to import declines.

The financial crisis is essentially a U.S. crisis, spread abroad by the sale of toxic financial instruments. The rest of the world got into trouble by trusting Wall Street. The real American crisis is much worse than the financial crisis. The real American crisis is the offshoring of U.S. manufacturing, industrial, and professional service jobs such as software engineering and information technology.

Jobs offshoring was initiated by Wall Street pressures on corporations for higher earnings and by performance-related bonuses becoming the main form of managerial compensation. Corporate executives increased profits and obtained bonuses by substituting cheaper foreign labor for U.S. labor in the production of goods and services marketed in the U.S.

Jobs offshoring is destroying the ladders of upward mobility that made the U.S. an opportunity society and eroding the value of a university education. For the first decade of the 21st century, the U.S. economy has been able to create net new jobs only in domestic nontradable services, such as waitresses, bartenders, sales, health and social assistance and, prior to the real estate collapse, construction. These jobs are lower paid than the jobs were that have been offshored, and these jobs do not produce goods and services for export.

Jobs offshoring has increased the U.S. trade deficit, putting more pressure on the dollar’s role as reserve currency. When offshored goods and services return to the U.S., they add to imports, thus worsening the trade imbalance.

The policy of jobs offshoring is insane. It is shifting U.S. GDP growth to the offshored locations, such as China, thus halting growth in U.S. consumer incomes. For the past decade, U.S. households substituted an increase in indebtedness for the lack of growth in income in order to continue increasing their consumption. With their home equity refinanced and spent, real estate values down, and credit card debt at unsustainable levels, it is no longer possible for the U.S. economy to base its growth on a rise in consumer debt. This fact is a brake on U.S. economic recovery.

Stimulus packages cannot substitute for the growth in real income. As so many high value-added, high productivity U.S. jobs have been offshored, there is no way to achieve real growth in U.S. personal incomes. Stimulus spending simply adds to government debt and pressure on the dollar, and sows seeds for high inflation.

The U.S. dollar survives as reserve currency because there is no apparent substitute. The euro has its own problems. Moreover, the euro is the currency of a non-existent political entity. National sovereignty continues despite the existence of a common currency on the continent (but not in Great Britain). If the dollar is abandoned, then the result is likely to be bilateral settlements in countries’ own currencies, as Brazil and China now are doing. Alternatively, John Maynard Keynes’ bancor scheme could be implemented, as it does not require a reserve currency country. Keynes’ plan is designed to maintain a country’s trade balance. Only a reserve currency country can get its trade and budget deficits so out of balance as the U.S. has done. The prospect of U.S. default and/or inflation and decline in the dollar’s exchange value is a threat to the reserve system.

The threats to the U.S. economy are extreme. Yet, neither the Obama administration, the Republican opposition, economists, Wall Street, nor the media show any awareness. Instead, the public is provided with spin about recovery and with higher spending on pointless wars that are hastening America’s economic and financial ruin.

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury in the Reagan administration. His latest book, How The Economy Was Lost, has just been published by CounterPunch/AK Press. He can be reached at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com

Rohirrim
02-04-2010, 04:52 AM
Obviously, the Chinese agree. At the last summit they sent a low level government functionary to walk around and talk with Obama. There wasn't much he could do about the insult. We sold out our country to the greed merchants on Wall Street and now we will pay the price. Given the power just given to corporations in this country by the SCOTUS, things are only going to get worse. Congress will write more legislation that kills more jobs and makes more corporations even wealthier. China will keep these pimps dancing to their tune and at the right time will simply cut them off at the knees. Then, we will fall.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-04-2010, 06:37 AM
Obviously, the Chinese agree. At the last summit they sent a low level government functionary to walk around and talk with Obama. There wasn't much he could do about the insult. We sold out our country to the greed merchants on Wall Street and now we will pay the price. Given the power just given to corporations in this country by the SCOTUS, things are only going to get worse. Congress will write more legislation that kills more jobs and makes more corporations even wealthier. China will keep these pimps dancing to their tune and at the right time will simply cut them off at the knees. Then, we will fall.

Yep.

The pinheads on the right who cheered Bush on when oil boy decided to launch two wars without paying for either of them (read: the same right-wing BB brains who are now suddenly "concerned" about deficits) never really understood that Bush was passing the bill for those wars onto them (and their children and grandchildren.)

TheDave
02-04-2010, 07:10 AM
A very strange article...

He first warns us of this 3rd crisis and spends several paragraphs explaining what will happen when :
This crisis will occur when confidence is lost in the U.S. dollar as world reserve currency

Then negates all that by saying:
The U.S. dollar survives as reserve currency because there is no apparent substitute.

So that was a little hard for me to understand his point with those contradictions.

Regardless, I do agree with the basic premise that we are not out of the woods. IMO, the thing that will blow up in our face (again) is the refusal to fix the financial sector. Everyone admits that a total lack of regulations allowed this balloon to expand to the point where it was in 07' - 08'.

Then came the bail-out (which I agreed with), though I assumed they would change the rules of the game before they dumped trillions into it. Stupid me... To this day we have very little new regulation and are now rewarding people for making profits based on the same unsound judgment that got us into this problem... and on top of it these SOB's did it with our tax dollars.

The lobbying and "palm greasing" has hit a level where all intelligence and sense of duty is gone and has been replaced 100% by fiscal greed.

The only hope now is that this greed accidently includes enough stability that allows the dust to settle. Fortunately, the global nature of business means we are all in this together.

mhgaffney
02-04-2010, 07:55 PM
Dave,

You miss an important point. Since the crisis started in the US due to corrupt banking practices -- the world will increasingly view the US as corrupt and will shun any attempt at US leadership.

For similar reasons, the world will also increasingly close ranks in opposition to US aggression and occupation of Iraq, Afghanistan, Columbia, Yemen, and Pakistan etc.

We have shown we are neither capable nor worthy. The world will go its own way -- and eventually find another reserve currency.

It's a vain hope of yours -- that US "greed accidentally includes enough stability [and] allows the dust to settle."

Ain't gonna happen.

MHG

TheDave
02-04-2010, 08:40 PM
Dave,

You miss an important point. Since the crisis started in the US due to corrupt banking practices -- the world will increasingly view the US as corrupt and will shun any attempt at US leadership.

For similar reasons, the world will also increasingly close ranks in opposition to US aggression and occupation of Iraq, Afghanistan, Columbia, Yemen, and Pakistan etc.

We have shown we are neither capable nor worthy. The world will go its own way -- and eventually find another reserve currency.

It's a vain hope of yours -- that US "greed accidentally includes enough stability [and] allows the dust to settle."

Ain't gonna happen.

MHG

Don't kid yourself Gaff... these "corrupt" practices you speak of were known all over the world. There was no secret that Glass-Steagel was gone, there was no secret that our banks were leveraging themselves to the tune of 30 to 1 especially with respect to mortgage securities, and it was certainly no secret that companies like AIG were writing derivatives as fast as the ink could dry.

None of this "Corruption" was hidden from the public. As a matter of fact, the world should be kissing our ass right now. It's our backing of AIG and the other "too big to fail" companies that kept this bubble from completely imploding and taking most of them down with us. The world knowlingly got in bed with us and helped inflate this bubble all the way.

As for this "They will go there own way" crap... Really?... and what makes you think the world is ready to survive without us? We import over $1.5 trillion worth of goods every year and are the largest consumer base in the world.

I know you love to hate on everything america, but don't let it get in the way of the reality of the situation.

watermock
02-04-2010, 09:51 PM
Boy, a little late to the party the bubba.

Where where you when I was screaming about it right after I got out of the Hospital?

You didn't say shiat, or you in on it?

WTF do you do, anyway?

watermock
02-04-2010, 09:55 PM
None of this "Corruption" was hidden from the public. As a matter of fact, the world should be kissing our ass right now. It's our backing of AIG and the other "too big to fail" companies that kept this bubble from completely imploding and taking most of them down with us. The world knowlingly got in bed with us and helped inflate this bubble all the way.

As for this "They will go there own way" crap... Really?... and what makes you think the world is ready to survive without us? We import over $1.5 trillion worth of goods every year and are the largest consumer base in the world...

Who the **** are you?

You do realize that this country's wealth is gone, or are just stupid, or think this scam can go on indefinately?

Tell me!

mhgaffney
02-04-2010, 10:05 PM
No Dave,

It was a con job. Led by Greenspan, the banksters conned everyone to believe in the power of the bubble.

It goes like this: We all get rich together! Unregulated Capitalism = a money machine = God.

It was the ultimate pyramid scheme. Mock makes a good point. If you knew it was bogus -- how come you didn't speak out?

Requiem
02-04-2010, 10:38 PM
I recently overheard one of my political science professors talking about the economic crisis in Greece, as it is about to go bankrupt. I think the ramifications for that in Europe and across the globe could be extremely detrimental.

TheDave
02-04-2010, 11:29 PM
No Dave,

It was a con job. Led by Greenspan, the banksters conned everyone to believe in the power of the bubble.

It goes like this: We all get rich together! Unregulated Capitalism = a money machine = God.

It was the ultimate pyramid scheme. Mock makes a good point. If you knew it was bogus -- how come you didn't speak out?

This has nothing to do with my ability to predict the "Great Recession". Our discussion here is focused on your statement that the "The world will go its own way "

The world, who you spend an awful lot of time defending, was just as guilty of unregulated greed as we were.

and if they are just going to "Go on it's way" why do they keep buying up our debt? For a group of people that do not trust us, are pissed for getting them into this mess, and are looking for another currency they sure are buying up T-Bills at an alarming rate.

Like your own article said...

The U.S. dollar survives as reserve currency because there is no apparent substitute.

TheDave
02-04-2010, 11:31 PM
I recently overheard one of my political science professors talking about the economic crisis in Greece, as it is about to go bankrupt. I think the ramifications for that in Europe and across the globe could be extremely detrimental.

The debtload of our european allies has me more worried than anything else.

mhgaffney
02-04-2010, 11:34 PM
Why does the European debt burden worry you more than anything else?

TheDave
02-04-2010, 11:39 PM
Why does the European debt burden worry you more than anything else?

Because they hit the end of their rope WAY too quickly... We all have a ways to go here, and for some of these countries to already be considered insolvent... Ouch.

That will continue to shift more of the burden onto us.

12+ Trillion and climbing is bad enough... add a couple of allies onto our back and this could become insurmountable.

mhgaffney
02-05-2010, 12:01 AM
Dave, you and Mock still don't get it.

You still want to point the finger elsewhere. I don't deny that evil and corruption is everywhere. It is not just the US.

But the fact is the US has been the dominant nation wince 1945. We have set the policies for the whole world -- in economics and also militarily, politically and until the Bush era -- also culturally.

You guys are still ignorant about the evils of US imperialism. This goes hand in hand with the financial corruption on Wall Street. The two are closely related. They are both part of the same sick world view that emanates from Washington DC and New York.

Check out this piece about Henry Kissinger -- who should be in prison for his many crimes -- but is still a free man walking around on the street - because the vast majority of Americans - including people like you -- are still ignorant of his crimes. (Either that -- Or you just don't give a hoot.)

This piece tells how we supported Saddam -- even gave him WMD -- so he could massacre the Iranians. No wonder that today some in Iran feel they need WMD to prevent a US attack.

Incidentally -- Kissinger's treachery was repeated AGAIN after the First Gulf War -- by HW Bush when he encouraged the Sh'ites to rise up. They did -- thinking the US would support them. Bush did nothing -- and allowed them to be massacred.

This is why I say -- WE IN THE US ARE GUILTY. You need to understand this.

In a world run from Washington -- you and I ultimately must answer for the crimes of our leaders. It is up to us to hold them accountable. My question is: Are there enough honest people left in America to turn things around? Given the sort if reactionary knee jerk BS on this board -- I seriously wonder that it may be too late to turn our nation around. We are a nation of phony baloney Christians -- filled with fear and hate for other people -- instead of compassion and the fire of the spirit - so necessary for social justice.
MHG

February 4, 2010

Master of Treachery

Kissinger on Iraq

By BARRY LANDO

www.Counterpunch.org

It is amazing how Henry Kissinger has been able to retain his aura of invincible genius in international relations, continuing to counsel presidents, foreign governments and major global businesses, while occasionally writing lofty Op Ed pieces advising the U.S. on what it should or should not be doing next. This mind you, despite Kissinger’s own history of monumental cynicism and duplicity when he was guiding foreign policy for President’s Nixon and Ford. Indeed, it’s a tribute to the ability of mainstream American media to forgive and forget.

The latest example is an Op Ed piece Kissinger just wrote for the New York Times warning American leaders that they are no longer giving Iraq the attention it deserves.

The fact is, however, when Kissinger was in charge of U.S. policy for Iraq, the results for its people, particularly the Kurds, were disastrous. I wrote about it in my book "Web of Deceit-the History of Western Complicity in Iraq, from Churchill to Kennedy to George W. Bush."

Over the decades, the Kurds quixotic struggle for some form of independence doomed them to a seemingly endless cycle of rebellion followed by incredibly vicious repression. Those uprisings were usually encouraged by enemies of Iraq’s rulers who made use of the Kurds to destabilize the regime in Baghdad. It was a ruthless, deceitful process, which resulted in hundreds of thousands of Kurds being slaughtered and displaced over the years. And it was an ideal playing field for Kissinger.

For years, the Shah of Iran had been secretly supporting the Iraqi Kurds to put pressure on Baghdad. So were the Israelis, who hoped to distract Iraq’s increasingly virulent leader from joining an Arab attack on the Jewish state. In 1972, Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon, motivated by fear that Iraq was becoming too cozy with the Soviet Union, agreed to a request from the Shah to help back the Kurds.

For the sake of deniability, the U.S. supplied the Kurds with Soviet arms seized in Vietnam, while Israel provided Soviet weapons that it had captured from the Arabs. According to the Washington Post’s Jon Randal, the clandestine operation was kept secret even from the U.S. State Department, which had argued against any such support. The Kurd’s news friends, however, did not want their protégées to win their struggle. An independent Kurdish state would be much too disruptive for the region, they felt. Their support was carefully doled out—enough to keep the revolt going, but not enough to take it to victory.

The Kurdish leader, Mustafa Barzani, was hard-headed enough to understand his people were being used by Iran, but not worldly enough to comprehend that his American backers could be equally duplicitous. “We do not trust the Shah,” Barzani told reporter Randal in 1973. “I trust America. America is too great a power to betray a small people like the Kurds.”

It was to be a fatal error of judgment. In 1975 the Shah and the leaders of Iraq abruptly agreed to settle their disputes and signed a treaty of friendship. A key part of the agreement was that Iran would immediately cease its support of the Iraqi Kurds. Overnight, Iranian army units that had been supporting the Kurds—with artillery, missiles, ammunition, and even food—retreated across the border into Iran. The U.S. and the Israelis similarly called a sudden halt to their support. At the same time, Iraqi troops began a massive offensive against the hapless Kurds.

Thus, without any warning, the Kurds were abandoned; not just their fighting men, the pesh merga, but their villages, wives, and children, were exposed to a ferocious Iraqi onslaught. Barzani sent a desperate plea to Kissinger for aid. “Our movement and people are being destroyed in an unbelievable way with silence from everyone. We feel, Your Excellency, that the United States has a moral and political responsibility towards our people, who have committed themselves to your country’s policy. Mr. Secretary, we are anxiously awaiting your quick response.”

Twelve days later, a U.S. diplomat in Tehran cabled CIA director William Colby, noting that Kissinger had not replied and warning that if Washington ”intends to take steps to avert a massacre it must intercede with Iran promptly.”

Meanwhile, a quarter of a million Kurds fled for their lives to Iran. Turkey closed its borders to thousands of others seeking refuge. Many of the militants left behind—especially students and teachers—were rounded up by the Iraqi, imprisoned, tortured, and executed. Some 1,500 villages were dynamited and bulldozed.

Over the following weeks and months, as the killing continued, Barzani issued more desperate appeals to the CIA, to President Gerald Ford, to Henry Kissinger. No one answered. Kissinger not only refused to intervene but also turned down repeated Kurdish requests for humanitarian aid for their thousands of refugees.

This duplicity of American officials might never have surfaced but for an investigation in 1975 by the U.S. Congress’s Select Committee on Intelligence headed by New York Democrat Otis Pike. The Pike report concluded that for Tehran and Washington the Kurds were never more than “a card to play.” A uniquely useful tool for weakening Iraq’s “potential for international adventurism.” From the beginning said the report, “The President, Dr. Kissinger, and the Shah hoped that our clients [Barzani’s Kurds] would not prevail.” The Kurds were encouraged to fight solely in order to undermine Iraq. “Even in the context of covert operations, ours was a cynical enterprise.”

The report’s damning conclusions continued: Had the U.S. not encouraged the Kurds to go along with the Shah and renew hostilities with Iraq, “the Kurds might have reached an accommodation with [Iraq’s] central government, thus gaining at least a measure of autonomy while avoiding further bloodshed. Instead the Kurds fought on, sustaining thousands of casualties and 200,000 refugees.”

One of the officials who testified before the committee in secret session was Henry Kissinger. When questioned by an appalled congressman about the U.S.’s decision to abandon the Kurds to their bloody fate, Kissinger chided the committee, “One should not confuse undercover action with social work.”

Barry M. Lando, a graduate of Harvard and Columbia University, spent 25 years as an award-winning investigative producer with 60 Minutes. The author of numerous articles about Iraq, he produced a documentary about Saddam Hussein that has been shown around the world. He lives in Paris. His latest book is “Web of Deceit: The History of Western Complicity in Iraq, from Churchill to Kennedy to George W. Bush.” He can be reached through his blog.

watermock
02-05-2010, 12:13 AM
Because they hit the end of their rope WAY too quickly... We all have a ways to go here, and for some of these countries to already be considered insolvent... Ouch.

That will continue to shift more of the burden onto us.

12+ Trillion and climbing is bad enough... add a couple of allies onto our back and this could become insurmountable.


Welcome to, the machine.

Anyone with a clue knows the only thing propping us up is Military Power and what's left of Bretton Woods.

The mutinational companies and our own fed SOLD US OUT.

Our debt is the biggest in the history of the world!

We owe 100k for every person in this country!

We are going to go thru massive default soon.

We just reinflated the bubble for maybe 5 years, God help us.

watermock
02-05-2010, 12:28 AM
Oh, I get it Gaffney, your vision is just so anti-american.

Why don't you just take a quick boat to China, traitor?

There are people trying to take back this country, insead of jst crucifying it.

It's pretty ****ed up, but why not try to do something constructive?

BTW, C2C is rockin' tonight.

mhgaffney
02-05-2010, 12:47 AM
Which people, Mock? Palin? The Tea baggers?

You would exchange Tweedle Dee with Tweedle Dum?

Give me a break.

Here is the answer for what ails us -- and the world.

http://www.amma.org/

mhgaffney
02-05-2010, 12:56 AM
There was also a tiny minority in pre WW II Germany -- who saw the truth about the Third Reich. They were too small in numbers to prevail.

No doubt, most germans of the day looked upon them as traitors too. But history proved them correct.

America is vastly more powerful than Nazi Germany -- hence vastly more dangerous. No wonder world polls show that most people on the planet think the US and Israel are the greatest treat to peace.

They are correct.

watermock
02-05-2010, 01:17 AM
It wasn't a "tiny minority", dumbass, it was people starving and wanting "change".

When have you seen me endorse Palin, or Obama or McCain?

Post war Germany was humiliated after calling for an Armistice. Not surrender.

You forget Russia fell in 1917 and Germany tried 1 more time before popular sentiment dissolved and the Weimar republic emerged in place of the Monarch.

Remember most people didn't even have electricity or phones untill after WW2.

TheDave
02-05-2010, 06:19 AM
Dave, you and Mock still don't get it.

You still want to point the finger elsewhere. I don't deny that evil and corruption is everywhere. It is not just the US.

But the fact is the US has been the dominant nation wince 1945. We have set the policies for the whole world -- in economics and also militarily, politically and until the Bush era -- also culturally.

You guys are still ignorant about the evils of US imperialism. This goes hand in hand with the financial corruption on Wall Street. The two are closely related. They are both part of the same sick world view that emanates from Washington DC and New York.



As usual Gaff your need for a massive conspiracy that only you can see outweighs your ability to discuss the facts of the situation.

Have fun with damning everything we do.

Bob
02-05-2010, 06:56 PM
I recently overheard one of my political science professors talking about the economic crisis in Greece, as it is about to go bankrupt. I think the ramifications for that in Europe and across the globe could be extremely detrimental.

Greece is just a head of the curve... and here in America we waste energy on right and left blame games while we let them send ever more...