Category Archives: Macroeconomic policy

Guest Post: FDIC’s Insurance Commitments 34% Higher Than Reported

Submitted by Rolfe Winkler, publisher of OptionARMageddon. [Reader note: I thought it useful to add commentary around the FDIC data. Those that would prefer to skip straight to it, see the chart and read paragraphs 4-9]. Conventional wisdom says that financial companies are having trouble borrowing because credit markets are broken. This is dangerously wrong. […]

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Japanese Expert Criticizes US Wishful Thinking on Economic Crisis

The George Santayana saying, “Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it,” is so oft repeated as to verge on cliche. Yet the US variant of this syndrome is to be aware of history, then rationalize how it does not apply to us. Japanese policy makers from the early days of the […]

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Guest Post: More Debt Won’t Rescue the Great American Ponzi

Submitted by Rolfe Winkler, CFA, publisher of OptionARMageddon.com Policy-makers not only misunderstand the economic crisis, they continue to underestimate it. Consequently, solutions to date have not only failed to “fix” anything, they have made the problem worse. The problem isn’t falling asset prices, it’s not rising foreclosures, it’s too much debt. With an assist from […]

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Martin Wolf: Rethinking the Lessons of Japan’s Debt Unwind

Ah, today the Financial Times reminds me of the way it was back in early 2007, when it was clearly heads and shoulders above any US paper. Wonder why I have fewer days like that, It isn’t improved reporting by the US media (although they are further down the curve). I suspect that the FT […]

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"We Are Threatened by a Veritable Disaster"

I must confess to having read only a bit of economist Axel Leijonhufvud’s writings, but what I have seen, I have liked very much. Leijonhufvud’s current post at VoxEU does a very good job of looking at the economic mess the US is in and assesses policy options. It is a remarkably straightforward piece. Most […]

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Willem Buiter: The US and UK as Banana Republics

This blog was early to draw a comparison between the US financial crisis and emerging markets crises. As we wrote in March 2008: Although the Journal does not draw this comparison, the US is in very much the same boat as Thailand and Indonesia in 1997, during the emerging markets crisis. And although the US […]

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Pimco’s Gross Calls for US to Spend Trillions to Save the Economy

The financial services industry is full cry in its demands for taxpayers to save its hide. From Bloomberg: Bill Gross, co-chief investment officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., said the U.S. may slump into a “mini depression” unless policy makers spend trillions of dollars to spur growth. “This economy needs support from the government, a […]

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China: Agricultural Ministry Pegs Unemployment Higher than Wen; Official Warns of "Challenges to Social Stabilty"

Before we get to the substance of this post, I feel compelled to address the responses I have increasingly been getting when I post on unemployment in China, particularly demonstrations by workers (who often show up to work, find the factory shuttered and themselves stiffed for their last paycheck) and the fact that many of […]

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Willem Buiter: Mismanagement by the Officialdom Can Produce a Depression

To be fair, Willem Buiter’s latest post strives for a bit of gallows humor via its title, “YES WE CAN!! have a global depression if we really continue to work at it…,” before getting down to serious business, namely, that the powers that be risk missing the opportunity to salvage the global economy. What makes […]

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Soros Gives Thumbs Down to TARP 1.0, Revisited, "Aggregator Bank"

Readers may recall that we hated the TARP from its inception. Recall that the TARP was so named because the TA stood for “troubled asset”. The plan was to buy crappy assets from banks because this would leave them with nice pristine balance sheets and they could go forth and be reckless lend once again. […]

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Wolf Versus Pettis on US Stimulus, Fiscal Deficit (Not for the Fainthearted)

Martin Wolf has a very good comment in the Financial Times, “Why Obama’s plan is still inadequate and incomplete,” which readers might tempted to ignore, since the headline suggests the piece reaches a conventional conclusion: the Obama stimulus plan is too small. That would be a mistake. The Wolf article (as others have done) does […]

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