Well this was a post I missed...
Someone said the credit card bust is next. We already see that happening in the USA and I totally agree with you there. But if you think thats bad.... there is a much bigger problem awaiting the glorious people of planet earth and that is the printing of the US dollar. Thanks to our wonderful clueless new representatives in the white house and Congress we have successfully printed a bailout that will cost 1.2 trillion dollars. (another 9 trillion is in the works BTW) Our currency will soon become weak, and our interest alone on our national debt will be more than the entire countries net worth. In fact the debt is so great that China won't buy our debt anymore. Then we've got a real problem!
I hope you have a nice piano, cause your gonna be selling it for food.
Here is a great/funny little clip on the subject!
But who would buy that piano and with what? I wouldn't worry overmuch about what America is doing about this in isolation, for the same kind of thing is happening here in UK and elsewhere; the UK figures are not so large (but then Britain is a much smaller country with a far smaller population than US), though we're at it as well and look set to be at it for the foreseeable future in terms of bailing out not only high street banks but also large corporations and possibly pension funds. We're just in the process of printing some £75bn and another equivalent sum is said to be on the way - and this is in a climate where we now have the lowest interest rates in Bank of England history - i.e. in more than 300 years -and they are set to go to zero next (zero interset rate has been tried in Japan and failed, so it will be interseting to see what happens if Britain becomes the first country to venture into the uncharted waters of negative interest rates)...
The trouble is that no one seems yet to have pointed out that, although these desperate measures are suppoed to "kick-start" the economy and get sensible lending going again, lenders will not only back off from lending because of perceived bad risk but because they'll be unable to make sufficient profit out of loans at such low interest levels, so lenders will be discouraged from lending for reasons rather different from what has happened in the past. Likewise, an economic recovery is reckoned to be dependent upon a reasonable amount of saving, yet not only have increasingly fewer people any moeny to save, they have less and less incentive to do so by means of deposits becuase there is almost no interest available on such savings now and such as there is is still taxable.
The other - and perhaps more significant - problem is that all this money that the government purports to pledge to these organisations is unlikely to be paid to them. The government has no money of its own - only the money that it can extract from its taxpayers. In a climate where unemployment is increasing, businesses are going bust and the housing market is falling and all are set to continue to do so for the foreseeable future, the following will happen 9and indeed is already happening):
1. income tax /social insurance take will decrease from employers, employees and the self-employed (the quaintly named "National Insurance Contributions" are just another tax on work, since they do not insure anyone against anything and are largely compulsory rather than voluntary)
2. inheritance tax and capital gains tax take will also decrease due to falling asset values (houses, businesses, investments, etc.)
3. income tax take on deposit savings will decrease beause of less savings and lower levels of interest to tax
4. taxation on share dividends and other investment vehicles will reduce due to falls in their values
5. the government will have to pay out far more (from such tax as it can still take) in state benefits for the unemployed.
It is therefore necessary to ask where the money is supposedly to come from for all these bail-outs. The government could try to borrow it from IMF, I suppose but, as calls on IMF funding are already being made from many other countries in similar trouble, Britain will just have to take its place in the queue if it decides to attempt this route; in any case, it would be hard to see why IMF would lend money to a country where the risk is so great as it is in Britain's case. In addition, there is no guarantee that these bail-outs will actually achieve the economic stability that they are supposed to promise.
Much has been made of poor banking regulation and reckless lending and borrowing but, whilst these are certainly significant factors that have led to the present and future crisis, all banks everywhere would go out of business if they did not lend money; whilst much has also been made of the problems arising from inappropriate mortgage and business lending, governments themselves have borrowed on a massive scale and most of them are unable to repay those debts on demand - in fact it was recently stated (although I cannot vouch for the truth of this) that only one of the world's 200+ countries, Norway, could actually repay its debts on demand from its own resources - so, in a climate such as this, it is pretty obvious that anything that might be made to take on the appearance of a successful solution will in reality be no more than a smokescreen that will achieve nothing more effective than building a small dam to keep out the Pacific Ocean.
The state of the US dollar has also to be considered in more general terms rather than in isolation. Less than a year ago, the British pound stood at just over $2.11, yet recently it has dipped on occasion below $1.40; a couple of years or so ago it was around €1.53 but it has recently been close to parity. Most commentators say that the British pound is falling, which it is, but others have been saying the same for the US dollar which has nevertheless been gaining considerable ground over the British pound. The truth of the matter - which few seem to mention - is that all the major currencies are falling; it's just that some are falling faster than others. There is increasingly less guarantee that the British currency can even survive at all in the long run; if it does finally fail altogether, all that additional banknote printing will have been a waste of time and resources. I very much doubt that Queen Elizabeth II has ever given though to the possibility that her image on British coins and banknotes might actually disappear for good and I suppose that one could feel some sympathy for her if this does indeed occur in her 80s following a reign of almost six decades...
Best,
Alistair