Perhaps the greatest modern champion of central economic planning was the 20th century English economist John Maynard Keynes. Keynes, who was a political socialist and for a time a central banker, advocated the idea that the government should play a large, active role in the economy. Among the consequences...
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Hera
by
Ron Hera
on
Sun, Jul 1 2012
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Filed under: Federal reserve, GDP, OTC derivatives, CFTC, SEC, Gross Domestic Product, Securities and Exchange Commission, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, collateralized debt obligations, Obamacare, Pfizer, Commodities and Futures Trading Commission, Keynesian economics, Wells Fargo, Food and Drug Administration, GlaxoSmithKline, Lockheed Martin, Bank of America, General Dynamics, MBS, federal government debt, Rahn curve, CDOs, mortgage backed securities, Leviathan, J.P. Morgan Chase, FDA, Monsanto, Archer Daniels Midland, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, over the counter derivatives, John Maynard Keynes, Johnson & Johnson, Behemoth, Boeing, Citigroup, Ziz
Please, click here to read this article in pdf format: march-2-2010 We will be brief today, for nothing of macroeconomic consequence has taken place in the past 24hrs. The action that caught our attention yesterday was in the foreign exchange market (the market that never lies). In particular, we refer...
Posted to
A View from the Trenches
by
Martin Sibileau
on
Mon, Mar 1 2010
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Filed under: Martin Sibileau, Agency debt, CAD, interest rate, regulation, Agencies, Euro-zone, GSE, TSX, bubbles, Bank of America, asset inflation, European Union, exchange equation, Preferred Stock Purchase Program, PPSP, Euro, USD strength, Europe, inflation, Canadian dollar, non-nuetrality of money, delinquency buyouts