Wall Street Weekly | 10/09/2009 12:45 pm
Sinking Dollar Fair Warning to Obama, by Liz Peek

Image: WhiteHouse.gov
Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 10/5)
Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist.
The New York Times ran a story this week about the art that the Obamas have chosen for the walls of the White House. Featured in the piece was a painting by Ed Ruscha. The chosen canvas has a red background with the words "wait a minute," "maybe yes" and "maybe no" floating across the space. What an appropriate choice for our young president, who is suddenly irresolute about Afghanistan. Having once pronounced Kabul as central to the war on terror (oops! make that the Overseas Contingency Operation), the president is now angling for a Goldilocks position: not too little, not too much, responding to polls that show waning support for our activities in that desperate country.President Obama is uncertain not only about our military options, but also – dangerously – about economic choices. He recently affirmed while addressing a Wall Street crowd that "I’ve always been a strong believer in the power of the free market." That was good to hear, because almost none of his proposed programs suggest a love affair with capitalism. Instead, he has offered up one measure after another that substitutes government fiat for market economics – most notably in autos, health care and energy. The newest entry is the proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency whose czar will be empowered to decide on "the manner, settings and circumstances for the provision of any consumer financial products or services." Moreover, he has revved up his antitrust department, sanctioned pro-labor policies burdensome to American employers and started a trade war.
This litany of business-unfriendly stances is taking a toll, not only on the president’s popularity, but on the dollar. The dollar took a sizeable hit this week (and gold soared) when the Australians boosted their key interest rate, signaling a recovery in that country. While earlier this year global investors drove the dollar briefly higher in their quest for safety, they have since had second thoughts. The euro, for instance, has gained 18% in value compared to the dollar since March. You don’t have to read the tea leaves to find reasons to sell the dollar – you can simply delve into the budget projections.
To put things in perspective, note that budget deficits in the U.K. are about to sink the Labour Government. The IMF puts the U.K. budget deficit this year at 11.6% of GDP and at 13.2% next year. The net public debt of Great Britain is expected to amount to 92% of GDP in 2014, up from 58% today and 38%in 2007. (The Obamacare folks should note that the IMF has called for the U.K. to rein in their health-care program, a leading budget-breaker.) The Brits are alarmed about this state of affairs, which is why they are about to junk their existing government. David Cameron, the Tory leader most likely to take over as Prime Minister, has warned that the country is in for tough times – severe cuts in social spending and higher taxes. That is not the usual campaign rhetoric, but the country is looking the future square on, and does not like what it sees.
Here’s the sobering news for the U.S.: we’re not that far behind the U.K. Our budget deficit will total 12.5% of GDP this year according to the IMF, and our national debt will soar to 85% of GDP by 2014. These figures are spurring talk that the dollar will no longer be the world’s reserve currency and that oil producers may move to price their product eventually in a basket of currencies.
Read more about: Barack Obama, David Cameron, Economy, Ed Ruscha, Government, Liz Peek, Money, News, Politics, The New York Times, United Kingdom, Wall Street Weekly























249 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
C jay,
I think both sides have plenty of gullible, cut-and-paste types who spew their purloined convictions. My point was that "bucolic" means "of or relating to pleasant aspects of the countryside and country life."
Are you saying those of us with conservative points of view are country bumpkins?
By Lee Harrison on 10/10/2009 8:19 am Lee, I make a distinction between right wing and conservative. A conservative is concerned about the country and believes their are times when government intervention is needed. They tend to be more socially concervative than progressives. I would use the term left leaning rather than progressive or Liberal for the left side of the house. I was aiming it at someone who tries to appear as sophistacated - and knowledgeable- there are several that fit that bill.The list could continue, but you get the point: by not saying the kinds of things that show recognition of individual and state rights, by not listening to what a variety of voices can contribute to the discussion, by an unwillingness to be taught, and by a lack of humility, there is little evidence our President wants our individual, local, state, and national success. Instead, he seems intent on implementing an agenda.
It’s sad, really. This is someone who has the power and authority to do great things that could open the floodgates of opportunity for our country. The right path in economic and foreign affairs could be more readily determined if his agenda was set aside.
Pity the Americans who can’t find jobs, can’t feed their families, whose dreams have been destroyed by an economic crisis that could be remedied if someone who truly wanted to make things better would choose to do so.
Mr. Obama has thrown a lot of people under the bus. I wonder if someone would do the same to him if he dared to deviate from his current role as Messiah of the Progressive movement and instead became the President of the United States. http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/10/top_twenty_things_obama_doesnt_1.html
I just spent a few hours researching some of the claims in this article. Yesterday, and the day before, I did some in-depth research on the dollar, the IMF, the deficit under the Bush administration compared to prior, and comparing that to what the pencil pushers are suggesting it will be at the end of this year. I came across research and articles that were written with the ‘What if Bush were the President this term? Would there be any difference?’
Then I read the comments above. I find it interesting that the charts done by Congress and Financial Gurus, are ignored, IF the sentiment is against Obama, for whatever reason. I find it interesting, as well, that although there is a ‘convenient lapse of memory’ when it comes to becoming acquainted with ‘the whole truth’, as opposed to one-sided opinion, that either ignores the wholeness of the situation, or criticizes that which doesn’t ‘fit’ into some desperately fed ‘mantra’.
If we continue to have the memory of a goldfish…..If we continue to choose sides, rather than synergize what is best for all….If we continue to make fun of, and deride the person that inherited this mess from GWB..then we have taken steps backward in intelligence. It is the ones who many refer to as ignorant, are not ‘aware’, who name-call and criticize for the fun of it—-in order to feel better about the situation they helped create. For the record….when there are laws against monopolies…it is for a reason….just because someone makes moeny doing something which is against the law, preventing new entry into the capitalist system….doesn’t mean they should continue to side-step the law. We are a country of laws…….and the crooks on wall street, the oil companies, the banks that swindled the money away from the middle class, the Bush tax cuts that took money away from the States—ie Revenue Sharing and gave that money to the rich buds-of-W, ALL did their dirty deeds under the wild-wild west of Bush administration—and THAT is what got us into this mess…..
I have to ask myself as I read some of the comments…WHY people cannot ‘see’…then I remembered…it is because they want someone to blame, who does not appear to them, to be on THEIR side.
I read NO SOLUTIONS here today——only criticisms and derisions, slanted to one side of the aisle. You know, humans have 2 sides of a brain intheir head—-why limit yourselves to using only one side, ie HALF a brain?
Here is a piece of info I discovered this afternoon:
From July, 2008—Huffpo..
WASHINGTON — The government’s budget deficit will surge past a half-trillion dollars next year, according to gloomy new estimates, a record flood of red ink that promises to force the winner of the presidential race to dramatically alter his economic agenda.The deficit will hit $482 billion in the 2009 budget year that will be inherited by Democrat Barack Obama or Republican John McCain, the White House estimated Monday. That figure is sure to rise after adding the tens of billions of dollars in additional Iraq war funding it doesn’t include, and the total could be higher yet if the economy fails to recover as the administration predicts.Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/07/28/bush-leaving-next-preside_n_115335.html
The result: the biggest deficit ever in terms of dollars, though several were higher in the 1980s and early 1990s as a percentage of the overall economy…….
And a headline in 2004: While Bush was the President:
Published on Friday, October 22, 2004 by CommonDreams.org The Bush Budget Deficit Death Spiral by Robert Freeman Lenders talk about a �debtor�s death spiral.� It occurs when borrowers get so far in over their heads they begin borrowing money just to cover the interest payments on past borrowings. The borrowers have to do this to keep the lending flowing but they can no longer plausibly pay down the principal. As new debt compounds on old, bankruptcy becomes imminent. Further lending is foolhardy. Foreclosure is only a matter of time. The U.S. is starting to look like it is entering just such a death spiral. It is foretold not simply by the large and growing deficits, nor by the fact that their carrying costs will rise quickly as interest rates rise. Rather, it is the fact that these trends are becoming irreversible, a structural part of the U.S. economy. When the ultimate collapse will occur, whether it comes with a bang or a whimper, how it will be triggered, and how severe it will be are as yet unknown. But as Herbert Stein, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under Richard Nixon was fond of saying, �Things that can�t go on forever, don�t.� The first signs of impending trouble are the exploding budget deficits themselves. They began, of course, under the parlous economic stewardship of Ronald Reagan. Reagan cut the marginal tax rate on the wealthiest of Americans from 70% to 38%. He promised it would spur an orgy of investment and rocket the economy to new levels of production and prosperity. Instead, his �supply side economics� did the exact opposite. It produced the deepest recession since the Great Depression. Output fell 2.2% in 1982 while budget deficits soared. When Reagan took office in 1981, the national debt stood at $995 billion. Twelve years later, by the end of George H.W. Bush�s presidency, it had exploded to $4 trillion. Reagan was a �B� grade movie actor and a doddering, probably clinically senile president, but he was a sheer genius at rewarding his friends by saddling other people with debts. Bill Clinton reversed Reagan�s course, raising taxes on the wealthy, and lowering them for the working and middle classes. This produced the longest sustained economic expansion in American history. Importantly, it also produced budgetary surpluses allowing the government to begin paying down the crippling debt begun under Reagan. In 2000, Clinton�s last year, the surplus amounted to $236 billion. The forecast ten year surplus stood at $5.6 trillion. It was the last black ink America would see for decades, perhaps forever. George W. Bush immediately reversed Clinton�s policy in order to revive Reagan�s, once again showering an embarrassment of riches on the already most embarrassingly rich, his �base� as he calls them. He ladled out some $630 billion in tax cuts to the top 1% of income earners. In true Republican fashion, they returned the favor by investing over $200 million to ensure Bush�s re-election. Do the math. A $630 billion return on a $200 million investment: $3,160 for $1. I�ll give you $3,160. All I ask is that you give me $1 back so I can keep the goodness flowing. Do we have a deal? Republicans know return on investment. But the cost to the public has been a return to the exploding deficits of the Reagan years. Bush blew through Clinton�s surplus in his first year. The 2004 deficit reached $415 billion, a record. Still, its real size is masked by the fact that Bush has shifted $150 billion from the Social Security trust fund in order to make the shortfall look smaller. It�s like pretending you�re richer when you move money from one pocket to another. Both sums have to be repaid, so the real amount borrowed is the $415 billion �nominal� deficit plus the $150 billion from Social Security or $565 billion. This shell game with federal trust funds taints all official forecasts about Bush�s deficits going forward. For example, the Congressional Budget Office estimates Bush�s cumulative ten year deficit at $2.3 trillion, to be sure, a breathtaking shortfall from the $5.6 trillion surplus he inherited from Clinton. But as with the yearly number, this one ignores the trust fund sleight of hand, an omission of some $2.4 trillion. When this is added back in, Bush�s ten year deficit leaps to $4.7 trillion, $10.3 trillion short of Clinton�s number. But even that number is understated because the CBO forecasts are based on current law. Bush�s tax cuts have not yet been made permanent. If Bush is re-elected and the cuts are made permanent, that would add another $3.2 trillion to the shortfall. It was not too long ago that a $3.2 trillion increment to anything would have made sober people�s noses bleed but such figures are mere accounting details to the Big Thinkers in the White House, especially since it will not be their constituents who are paying it back. Add it all together�the �nominal� deficit, the stealth siphoning from Social Security, and the permanent effects of Bush�s tax cuts�and the 10 year deficit explodes to a mind-boggling $7.9 trillion. Within ten years, the government will owe more than $15 trillion. And this, at precisely the time the government needs fiscal solvency to begin paying the Baby Boomers their Social Security. This run-up in debt represents the most rapid, predatory looting of public wealth in the history of the world. The interest costs alone will consume the government and, soon, the entire economy. In fiscal 2004, interest costs came to $321 billion against a deficit of $415 billion. So three quarters of all the current year borrowing is spent paying interest on past borrowing. This is the most immediate symptom of the deficit death spiral. And the situation will only get worse when interest rates rise, as they must. The U.S. has enjoyed an unprecedented period of low rates, the lowest in 50 years. The only direction they can go is up. And they will rise quickly once foreigners, who are more and more the buyers of U.S. debt, become saturated with dollars and begin to eschew additional lending. This is effectively what happened in the early 1970s when the Arab oil sheikdoms realized that Nixon had decoupled the dollar from gold redemption but was still paying for oil in dollars�essentially paper. The sheiks tripled the price of oil in 1973 and again in 1978. The OPEC �oil shocks� wrought havoc on the American economy, putting a death to the halcyon days of post-World War II economic growth. Today�s oil at $50 a barrel is the modern day enactment of the same implicit disdain for dollars. The Japanese did the same thing in 1987. For years they had funded Reagan�s massive supply side budget deficits but had been made fools as the dollar was losing 15% a year in value, more than wiping out the 5% return they were receiving on their treasuries. They wisely stopped buying in October 1987, precipitating the greatest one-day U.S. stock market collapse since the Great Depression. The �dollar overhang� problem caused by Bush�s record budget deficits is compounded by record U.S. trade deficits. Every month, the U.S. economy buys some $50 billion more from the world than it sells, in the act flooding the world with private dollars. These are on top of the public dollars from the budget deficits. The total trade deficit for 2004 will amount to some $680 billion. As recently as 1992, the amount was only $34 billion, a twenty fold increase in just over 10 years, another sign of the spiral. These �twin deficits��trade and budget�combine to well over $1 trillion a year of borrowing. Their effect is to bury the world�s economy in dollar debts, dollars that increasingly buy less and less. As mentioned above, no one knows when the world will say, �enough.� Japan holds a reported $1 trillion supply of dollars, China, more than half a trillion. Both have bought dollars�in effect loaning equivalent sums to the U.S.�in order to keep the value of their own currencies low and therefore make their own goods cheaper in American markets. The Bush administration claims that both countries will continue to buy dollars so that their own currencies will not rise. But the danger is that once one major player declares it doesn�t want any more dollars there will be a rush for the exits. Demand for dollars, and with it, the dollar�s price, will plummet. The last player holding dollars will be stuck with the bag, a multi-trillion dollar stash of dollar holdings that are worth only a fraction of what they were just a month before. In other words, there are structural incentives biasing the descent toward chaos rather than order. Already, the dollar is down 19% over the past year, an eerie harkening of the Japanese experience of the late eighties. Its decline is being cagily �managed� by the U.S. Treasury which has muscled foreign central banks into picking up the slack since private foreign buyers have begun to refuse further dollar purchases. Foreign central banks now hold some 40% of total U.S. government debt. The only way the U.S. government can prevent a stampede is to raise interest rates�the return for holding dollars. And Alan Greenspan has begun this process. But this, of course, increases the carrying costs of the national debt. As if a $7 trillion national debt funded at 4% isn�t bad enough, envision a $15 trillion debt at 10%. Instead of $300 billion a year in interest costs, think of $1.5 trillion. Instead of interest amounting to 3% of GDP, imagine the carnage as it approaches 10%. The higher rates will put a knife in the heart of an already tenuous recovery, undermining the only process by which payoff might ever be accomplished. It will suck all of the oxygen out of the economy. Economists call this the �crowding out effect� when lending to the government gets priority over private lending. After all, government has the power to tax in order to fulfill its obligations whereas private borrowers do not. But the market rations shortages by raising prices�interest rates�forcing private borrowers to pay ever more for scarce capital. In this way, markets for private debt mirror markets for public debt. Investment, the foundation of future growth, will be savaged. New roads, hospitals, factories, schools and research will be sacrificed to escalating interest rates borne of stratospheric debt. This occurred during the deficit-burdened 1980�s when investment grew at an annual rate of only 2.5% versus 6.9% in the surplus-graced 1990�s. And not surprisingly, productivity suffered as well. It grew at a meager 1.4% per year during the 1980�s but almost 50% faster, 2.0%, during the 1990�s. This is the perverse, inescapable cycle�the death spiral�that comes part and parcel with too much debt. Its relentlessly rising carrying costs steadily erode the possibility of getting out from underneath it. Higher debt loads lead to higher interest rates, which lead to lower investment which leads to slower growth and, ultimately, diminished prosperity. And it develops a runaway, recycling dynamic all its own. Finally, it is not only the high absolute levels of debt, nor their rapid expansion, nor even the imminence of much higher interest rates that consign the U.S. to the certain oblivion of a deficit death spiral. It is that this toxic combination of circumstances has become structural, irreversible, locked into the very nature of government economic policy. It is like a driver hurtling down a cul de sac and gluing his foot to the accelerator. The very purpose of the Reagan supply side tax cuts was to funnel more of the nation�s wealth to those already wealthy. This is what David Stockman, Reagan�s Budget Director, meant when he called them a �Trojan Horse.� And they did their job wonderfully. In 1980, the top 20% of income earners captured 43.7% of all national income. By 1992, at the end of the first Bush administration, their share had risen to 46.9%. Today it is over 49%. Meanwhile, the lowest four fifths of all income earners have seen their share of national income decline. The lowest quintile�s share has shrunk from 4.2% to 3.5%. The second lowest quintile has fallen from 10.2% to 8.8%. The middle quintile has seen its share fall from 16.8% to 14.8%. And the second highest quintile has suffered a decline from 25.0 to 23.3%. It is empirically the case that the rich are getting richer while everyone else is getting poorer. The problem this holds for national economic management is that the rich consume a much lower percentage of their income than do those who are not rich. How many cars can you drive at one time, anyway? The rich are also the most likely to spend what money they do on foreign luxury goods, take foreign vacations, make investments in foreign countries, or just let the money sit in the bank. The poor, working, and middle classes, on the other hand, spend virtually everything they earn. The car needs new tires, the kids need new shoes, the washing machine needs fixing, they�re two months behind on the rent and three months behind on the credit cards. In all of these ways, income shifted through the tax code to middle and lower quintile earners is quickly spent while income shifted to the wealthy is not. This is not class warfare. It is Economics 101. It is personal consumption�spending�that generates 67% of GDP. If more of the nation�s income goes to those who do not consume its output, while those who do consume it have less and less income, a structural shortfall emerges where there is simply not enough purchasing power to sustain GDP. GDP will ratchet steadily downward in mirror image to the rate at which national income is transferred upward. The only recourse is for the government to step in to pump up demand. This is the role the deficits play in sustaining GDP. This is why deficits exploded under Reagan, Bush I, and Bush II, all of whom cut taxes on the rich, but declined under Clinton who raised them. Rising public deficits are necessary�in fact, indispensable�to sustaining GDP because so much of the nation�s wealth has been transferred from those who, as a matter of necessity, spend it to those who, as a matter of taste, do not. Supply side economics (and that includes Bush�s ill-disguised variant) rests on the repeatedly disproved faith that investment and prosperity are caused by giving ever more of the nation�s wealth to the already wealthy. As long as this lunacy continues to drive tax policy, the government will keep expanding federal deficits. Eventually, possibly soon, this will cause a collapse of the dollar that can only be reversed by raising interest rates. But that will explode the carrying costs on the by-then mammoth debts, vitiating private sector investment. And that will kill all future prospects of meaningful growth. This is the essence of the Bush budget deficit death spiral. To be sure, the debts are an unequalled bonanza for those few who lend the money, for they get to do so at ever-higher rates of interest. But it is a death sentence for all the rest of the economy. Robert Freeman writes on economics, history and education. He can be reached at robertfreeman10@yahoo.com.Patty, very few have argued that the Bush Administration was not at fault in its spending, etc. However, if you feel all Obama’s troubles are inherited, how do you explain the apparently never-ending spending spree during the last 9 months?
It would behoove this administration to get a grip and figure out some ways to cut expenses, stop the unprecedented spending, and sending the deficit AND the national debt into oblivion….
Very few on the right side of the aisle, who participated in the demise of the economy as a Bush parrot, have FAILED to step up to the plate and offer solutions to correct, either. Instead, the political modus-operandi has been to criticize, demean, lie, change the subject with some insane distraction, and to practice having the memory of a gold-fish by repeating that the ‘problem’ is Obama…… when in fact….the problem is that Obama has been given somone else’s dirty laundry, AND is being blamed for it being dirty!!!!!!! A little nuance her, a slight slur there……..
What would be exciting to me, is if those that criticize, admit there is a problem that started before Obama, then participate in finding solutions…..so far, the ‘plan’ is to criticize Obama and blame HIM, at the same time, trying to UNDO whatever he and his team are suggesting. Instead of being part of the solution, the right side seems to insist on being a permanent part of the problem!
Your question regarding the 9 months, suggests to me, that perhaps you have never worked in a major corporation, in a decision-making capacity…..even for Corporations it takes a year, sometimes two, to settle on one course of action……unless like Bush and the gang, when they planned the invasion of Iraq. They had the PNAC written—-the ‘plan’, 4 years before Bush took office!!!!! How do YOU think Bush/Rove/Rummy/Wolfie/Cheney KNEW they were going to hold posisions in the White House 4 years later to carry out the plan?
As for the spending you mention: I own a house….last spring my hot water heater busted….and I did not have the cash to pay for a new one….so should I—-as you suggest for Obama—-NOT spend the money to replace it? And just go with cold water for a while? When there is a hole in the roof—-should we just let it be a hole in the roof? Even when it snows? Or should we spend the money to fix it, so that it doesn’t ALSO destroy the rafters, and the ceilings in the house, and become a haven for mold spores in the attic? which makes the house a ‘sick house’ and sends children to the hospitals?
Every single day, people like you and me, have to make decisions just like that. Do I fix it, and put it on the credit card? Or do I let it go, KNOWING that if I do, it could get much worse…BUT, I do not have the money to fix it? If you cannot pick the correct answer—-it is a good thing that all the naysayers against the efforts of Obama, are not in any position of power or the Presidency! Instead of making the tough choices—-with common sense and thought-filled reason—-you find it easier to just ‘do nothing’? and let it all fall apart?
Patty E stated,
"Your question regarding the 9 months, suggests to me, that perhaps you have never worked in a major corporation, in a decision-making capacity…..even for Corporations it takes a year, sometimes two, to settle on one course of action"
The problem here is that President Obama has never worked in a major corporation, in a decision-making capacity. He’s the one who needed the experience not the American people.
Deber B,
Excellent point. Glad you caught that!
hahaha…That expalins it! NOW I know WHY Obama was given the NOBEL PEACE PRIZE! the rest of the world confirmed he was not a corporate Crook!!!!!!! Thanks for helping me figure that out! Instead of the Shennanigans of the ‘how things were done before and we still got away with it’ robots, Obama is smart enough, according to the rest of the world, to think things through FIRST, and ALLOWS input from others, BEFORE he makes a decision!!!!!
In the old days, deber, in my grandparents generation——that’s how they did things too—-think first, act last. They were problem solvers, critical thinkers, who were smart enough to know, that what they ended up doing HAD to work out for everyone—if it did not—they would never get paid and never get any other work………today obviously—in your opinion, does not require ‘thought’ before ‘action’?
http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/contrib.php?cycle=2008&cid=N00009638
What isn’t listed is $33 million from ACORN and SEIU Contributions
Patty E, just to refresh your memory on the enormous donations given to Barack Obama by big corporations, I have provided the list.
Trust me, there are worse things than pandering to the big corporations. The ONLY reason Obama received the Nobel Peace Prize was due to five liberal academics in Norway who heard him go around the world and apologize for the United States of America….admitting all of her wrongdoing…it was music to their ears. Obama was only too pleased to put America in her place….a country he obviously was NOT proud of. When a President wins an undeserved Nobel Peace Prize because of his ability to "speak" what he "thinks" rather than accomplish those thoughts then the Nobel Peace Prize becomes a joke. Just like Al Gore’s Nobel Peace Prize….on global warming.
I believe Obama is being very careful in assessing what he should do in Afghanistan. Too bad he didn’t take his time with the failed $787 billion stimulus and the mangled healthcare bill. So, you see, Patty E, you can be very selective in what you praise in Obama because the one consistent thing about him is that he is inconsistent.
He has placed himself between a rock and a hard place and no matter which decision he makes on Afghanistan it will lose him the election in 2012. He knows that. He must be very concerned about that as well as his democratic congress. After all, as you can see from the above donations, these people put him in office and they expect payback in some form or another.
Callie, case in point if any help at all - a friend of mine runs a business that helps consumers with their electronic/computer needs, at home, and in their physical location. He is dedicated, competent, and successful; however, his business relies on his two banks credit lines - he cannot afford to stockpile equipement in hopes of selling it, or he would have been out of business 10 years ago! Thus, he relies on his local banks (2 of them).
One day, he was at my home running a credit card transaction for something I needed, and had to take another step first - it was before President Bush nationalized the banks and after the CRASH - he called one of his banks … they did NOT have the funds to advance him because they were holding "the line." His other bank did approve his advance.
Simple example, but it illustrated how local banks support our small businesses on an minute by minute basis - yes, there are the "too big to fail" conglomerates interested only in pacifying their stockholders, and themselves at the tops, but those are the institutions the "little banks" have to go through at times before communicating with the Federal Reserve each night to report deposits (which determine the amount of loan money they receive the next AM).
Had the banks not been bailed out small business in the US would be gone, now - that was a great part of the "spending spree during the last 9 months."
I have no reason to defend our POTUS, other than offer respect; however, our banks were nationalized by President Bush, and interest killed our nation, and all of world finance - and it started here! As "paper (including mortgages)" was sold over and over again there was a commission paid to each ‘agent,’ over and over again - until the principle was useless (aka "housing"). (I am not critising the nationalization of our banks!)
In fact, the seat of that demise was with President Reagan’s Secretary of State who’s goal was Wall Street - he did not serve President Reagan, he led him!
HEY, WHAT HAPPENED TO GLOBAL WARMING? DIDN’T AL GORE WIN A NOBEL PEACE PRIZE FOR HIS BOOK?
This headline may come as a bit of a surprise, so too might that fact that the warmest year recorded globally was not in 2008 or 2007, but in 1998.
But it is true. For the last 11 years we have not observed any increase in global temperatures.
And our climate models did not forecast it, even though man-made carbon dioxide, the gas thought to be responsible for warming our planet, has continued to rise.
So what on Earth is going on?
Climate change sceptics, who passionately and consistently argue that man’s influence on our climate is overstated, say they saw it coming.
They argue that there are natural cycles, over which we have no control, that dictate how warm the planet is. But what is the evidence for this?
During the last few decades of the 20th Century, our planet did warm quickly.
Recent research has ruled out solar influences on temperature increases
Sceptics argue that the warming we observed was down to the energy from the Sun increasing. After all 98% of the Earth’s warmth comes from the Sun.
But research conducted two years ago, and published by the Royal Society, seemed to rule out solar influences.
There’s more and it is an interesting read:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8299079.stm
Patty, Thank you for your research. I keep hearing about the dollar falling and future inflation. I don’t know why we cling to things that obvioulsly don’t work.
When we vistit other countries where the middle class is almost non existent it is a sobering reminder are what made this
Country so great. We are loosing the middle class in this country and I don’t think many people especially conservatives realize what that means for the country as a whole.