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  • Fed Policy Caused Financial Crisis?

    Was the Federal Reserve's monetary policy the proximal cause of the financial crisis of 2007-2008? Also, what are the best free market sources for information and argumentation on this mechanism (e.g. published papers, data, forecasted predictions, etc)?
    Posted to Economics Questions by Austen on Sun, Nov 18 2012
  • Why Financial Repression Will Fail

    Excessive leverage and risk in the financial system, e.g., using customer funds to speculate, never ends well. Stock market crashes, bank and investment firm failures or economic recessions are all potential consequences. Following the failure of the United States to regulate over the counter (OTC) derivatives...
    Posted to Hera by Ron Hera on Fri, Nov 16 2012
    Filed under: Federal reserve, CPI, deflation, inflation, GDP, IMF, Great Depression, CDS, unemployment, debt monetization, too big to fail, International Monetary Fund, Gross Domestic Product, Consumer Price Index, MBS, mortgage backed securities, over the counter derivatives, European Central Bank, ECB, Baltic Dry Index, sovereign default, bank failure, credit default swaps, BDI, monetary policy, OMT, recession, stock market crash, liquidity, QE3, quantitative easing III, systemic collapse, outright monetary transactions, market intervention, stagflation, tax increases, austerity measures, savings, U.S. Treasury, bank credit, stagnation, economic opportunity, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, instability, entrepreneurship, public funds, jobs, financial crisis, operation twist, bond yields, living standards, financial repression, Carmen M. Reinhart, OTC derivatives. Glass-Steagall Act, interest rates, net loss, middle class, consumer incomes, innovation, economic recovery
  • The Real Estate Bubble and Owners' Equivalent Rent

    Economists of the Austrian School understand that monetary expansion has the effect of making things more expensive than they otherwise would have been. At the root of the real-estate bubble was Federal Reserve monetary expansion funneled into the purchase of mortgages by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and...
    Posted to Economics Questions by hjmaiere on Mon, Nov 12 2012
  • Haiti and Wall Street - Two Sides of the Same Coin

    Haiti. What a mess. As my father said so brilliantly, "Even before the earthquake it was never anything but a campsite." I would wager that if you'd sent a truck full of free food into Port Au Prince the day before the earthquake the reaction of the city's residents would have been...
    Posted to Not-a-Lemming by FutbolGuru on Wed, Jan 27 2010
    Filed under: Wall Street, Earthquake, financial crisis, Haiti
  • Fannie and Freddie, Not Financial Sector to Blame

    Fannie and Freddie, Not Financial Sector to Blame By Monty Pelerin , posted January 3rd, 2010 http://www.economicnoise.com/2010/01/03/fannie-and-freddie-not-financial-sector-to-blame/ Corruption, Ineptness and Duplicity — The Description of Washington, DC For anyone still under the delusion that...
    Posted to Monty Pelerin's World by Monty Pelerin on Sun, Jan 3 2010
    Filed under: Government, Financial crisis, Corruption
  • [New & Improved links] Welcome to Big Brother III: More on the "Financial Stability Board"

    Please note my preceding posts , about the establishment of global financial governance, which has astonishingly thin coverage given its importance and implications. Has everyone been distracted? Here is some background and discussion that may be useful, in chronological order: " G-20 Shapes New...
    Posted to TT's Lost in Tokyo by TokyoTom on Thu, Dec 24 2009
    Filed under: financial crisis, regulation, moral hazard, Wall Street Journal, Financial Stability Board
  • Welcome to Big Brother II: WSJ brings us "The Future of Finance"

    Further to my prior post , I decided to take a whack at laying out the WSJ`s online report and describing some of its contents. The master page is here - is not outlined as clearly as the Asian print edition, which is in the following order, which I`ve linked to corresponding section of the online version...
    Posted to TT's Lost in Tokyo by TokyoTom on Wed, Dec 23 2009
    Filed under: financial crisis, regulation, moral hazard, Wall Street Journal
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