Category Archives: Economic fundamentals

Cautionary Tales: Central Bank Liquidity Injections Made Crises Worse in Latin America

Although the Fed has resorted to increasingly unconventional approaches for combatting our financial crisis, one it has used that is widely endorsed is the generous provision of liquidity. Luis I. Jácome H. in a VoxEU post, contends that the liberal use of central bank liquidity to stanch crises actually increased instability. One issue that will […]

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New York Times Gives Pride of Place to Economists Who Badly Misread Downturn

This is the sort of post Dean Baker often writes, “New York Times features economists who missed the housing downturn,” although this time, the subject is the outlook for 2009. Now in fairness, the author, Louis Uchitelle, puts in far more caveats than one normally sees in this sort of piece. In fact, it could […]

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Hybrid Car Sales Fell Sharply in November

Falling fuel prices and penny pinching consumers are not a plus for energy-saving technology, particularly the big ticket variety. And the latest auto sales figures complicate the plans of those who’d push Detroit towards making hybrids as one of the bailout concessions. From the Financial Times: US hybrid petro-electric sales in November shrank 53 per […]

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Past Financial Crises Suggest Pain Far From Over

Economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff have been publishing various findings from a large-scale data set they have constructed of past financial crises. They have looked back as far as 800 years, but not surprisingly, most of their output has consisted of analyses of modern crises (you can find some earlier discussions here and here). […]

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"World Economy in 2009: Three priorities for recovery"

Wolfgang Munchau has a good piece in todays’ Financial Times delineating his economic policy wish list for 2009. It has the merit of being to the point and pragmatic. His preamble contains some some striking tidbits. Munchau considers himself relatively optimistic about US housing, despite anticipating a 40 to 50% peak to trough decline, and […]

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Disingenuous New York Times Story on Global Imbalances

Since I am endeavoring to spend some time with my family, forgive me for dispatching this New York Times story, “Dollar Shift: Chinese Pockets Filled as Americans’ Emptied.” The article buys, hook, line and sinker, then- Fed-governor Ben Bernanke’s depiction of so-called global imbalances (the US borrowing from abroad to fund overconsumption; Japan, China, Taiwan, […]

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Japanese Rating Agency Chief Recommends Marshall Plan for US

In part because the Japanese corporate bond market is no where near as deep and large as its US counterpart, Japanese rating agencies hold far less sway than Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s. Nevertheless, the idea that Japan should write down its vast holdings of Treasuries and support US infrastructure spending (albeit with a few […]

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Guest Post: "How Can No One See An Imminent Fall in Chinese GDP and a Secular Slowdown Thereafter?"

I am now wondering if Google censors posts (I use Blogger), I put this post up at 1:33 AM, and even had a reader e-mail me that the post had disappeared (with no listing in “Recent Posts” which happens if I put up a post and then remove it). I have a record that it […]

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Analysts Expect Reports on Spending, Home Sales to Show Decine in November

Despite a not-as-bad-as-feared Black Friday (the day after Thanksgiving), retail sales fell in November. Analysts expect the financial releases next week to show a continued contraction in consumer spending (a broader measure, including services, is due for release this week). And housing data is anticipated to be not-so-hot either. I don’t pretend to have any […]

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Bloomberg and New York Times Differ on Status of Auto Industry Resuce (Updated)

Earlier today, George Bush made a surprisingly candid set of remarks, signaling a desire to avoid a disorderly collapse for the large US car manufacturers, and ambivalence about Chapter 11. The stock market started downward, and the trajectory accelerated with Standard & Poors putting GE’s ratings outlook at “negative,” meaning it is at risk of […]

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Not a Good Sign: Cerberus Reopens Talks to Merge Chrysler With GM

There had been rumors that Treasury would unveil a rescue plan for the Big Three on Wednesday. The day came and went with no announcement. Tonight we learn, via the Wall Street Journal, that Cerberus has revived merger talks for Chrysler with GM. The possibility of a deal would seem to complicate vastly an attempt […]

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Trepidation About Quantitative Easing, Version 2.0

The Fed made official its move to quantitative easing today, and said it will take no prisoners until it has lowered rates and credit spreads further: The Federal Reserve will employ all available tools to promote the resumption of sustainable economic growth and to preserve price stability… The focus of the Committee’s policy going forward […]

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