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Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
This is getting really difficult to understand: Do the banks run the govn'ts, including the Greek govn't, the Icelandic govn't, the new EU govn't ( whatever that means ), and the US govn't? Then, whatever runs what, whomever owes who, whatever bankers run the central bank wherever, then: WHAT DOES WHOLESALE DEBT REPUDIATION MEAN? And whatever wholesale debt repudiation means, is that repudiation inflationary or deflationary? Are we in a deflation now? When did this deflation begin?
Also, Starving Steve is beginning to notice that US $100 bills are not circulating. The new US $100 bill introduced Feb 10, 2011 is still not in Watsonville, California. It is unknown at the Chase Bank, one of the nation's largest banks. Is this indicative of a deflation?
Also interest rates are ZERO for savers. Money appears to have stopped circulating. The NYSE in real terms appears to be rising. What does this mean?
Also, houses have stopped selling. NO BUYERS. NONE, and none in British Columbia either.
Starving Steve is not only starving, he is scared.
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Well, since all our money is backed by debt, the interweb of leverage that keeps unraveling keeps shrinking money in circulation. This keeps driving up the relative price of assets otherwise known land, minerals and oil that cannot deflate fast enough to keep up with the depleted buying power. That's why goods and service won't get cheap either. The dollar carry trade just shoots that idea in the head as wealth is erecting toll booths on everything of worth not made by human hands. They don't want to create capital in Greece. Hot money wants to set up toll booths on water wells, roads and latrines.
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Hudson says the people of Iceland have to wait for an election to get rid of the government.
No, they don't.
They can refuse to pay their taxes, and starve the government.
Of course, this will require coordinated action, and they will have to do some suffering in the process, but better a little suffering now than a lifetime of slavery.
They also can boycott the Big Banks.
People don't realize that they are insuring their own slavery by continuing to patronize the Big Banks.
Just don't do business with these greedy assholes, and they will shrivel and die.
The power of the purse is stronger than the vote, when all we have to chose from is Political Enablers of the Financial Elite.raja
Boycott Big Banks • Vote Out Incumbents
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Class, let's review some of the oddities of this Great Recession:
a.) Stocks are barely steady in nominal dollars but apparently rising in value in real dollars----- if for no other reason than the value of the dividend stream is forcing upward the bid on the stocks, regardless of barely steady corporate profits. Yes, one gets a headache trying to comprehend this. Let's sum up: stocks paying let's say a dividend of 4% are bid strongly, regardless of barely steady corporate profits and regardless of deflationary stock market conditions. So, by catching a bid in a deflationary economy with a steady ( maybe even rising dollar foreign exchange value ), the stocks might be actually rising in value in real terms.
b.) No matter how much a real estate market wants to inflate the price of homes/land/rents, the market has to drop if there are no mortgages and/or if the currency ( the beaver buck or the dollar or the pound, Euro, whatever ) is rising in foreign exchange value. And a currency rises in value if the currency is in short supply and the market requires that currency. Shortages trump all other conditions. The currency (or any commodity) in short supply has to catch a bid.
c.) If Starving Steve is correct, Bernanke is a genius. He has faked-out the markets by telling the markets that money is being dropped by helicopters to rescue.... whatever.
d.) As the debt pyramid implodes, the money supply shrinks if for no other reason than the fact that money is backed by debt. Heretofore, the more debt the banks could compile, the more money they could borrow from the central banks. But the reverse is also true: the less debt, the less borrowing power from the Fed or Bank of Canada, or whatever. As a result of less borrowing from the central bank or even a retirement of debt by banks to the central bank, the money supply goes flat. Then the money supply can, and probably would shrink. The economy might grow marginally because of population growth, but the money supply might actually shrink..... Hence, we might be entering into a de-flation, and this could accelerate.
e.) If the de-flation accelerates into a panic, the central bank would be forced to print and inject money into the banking system. That could cause a hyper-inflation as an over-reaction to the acceleration of de-flation. Oh yes....
f.) In a de-flation, the next market to implode would be in what, and where? Who knows? And which banks lent into that market and to whom? What collateral do these banks have for the loans that are now going to go sour?
g.) What is interesting, downright remarkable, is that as all of this continues to unravel, none of this risk was apparent during the Reagan/ Laffer /Greenspan boom. This was almost a repeat of the same series of mistakes made during the 1920's boom, and those mistakes during that boom were not apparent either until everything began to unravel during the October panic of 1929.
[Class: Maybe you might tack this blog onto the door of your local Republican Party headquarters. Give this blog to your local Republican Party Member of Congress. Maybe tack this blog onto the door of your local university economics department. You might also place this blog directly into the hand of Dr. Arthur Laffer at Stanford University. ]Last edited by Starving Steve; November 06, 2011, 01:37 PM.
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Originally posted by rajaHudson says the people of Iceland have to wait for an election to get rid of the government.
No, they don't.
They can refuse to pay their taxes, and starve the government.
The issue isn't that the government must be destroyed.
The issue is that the government is clearly not acting as the representative of its constituency in this issue.
The people of Iceland don't want anarchy, they want a government which acts in their interest - as opposed to a government which acts on the bankster's interest.
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Originally posted by c1ue View PostThis makes no sense whatsoever.
The issue isn't that the government must be destroyed.
The issue is that the government is clearly not acting as the representative of its constituency in this issue.
The people of Iceland don't want anarchy, they want a government which acts in their interest - as opposed to a government which acts on the bankster's interest.
I'm suggesting a People's rebellion that will force out the existing government, much like the American rebellion when they refused to pay taxes. Then, put in a government that will represent the People.
In other words, keep government, but throw out the parasites that now infest it.
And . . . starve the Big Bankers, by the People transferring their money to small local banks.
The present government says the Big Banks are TBTF, but the reality is that the People will decide that, not Goldman-Sachs gofers.
So, yes, destroy the Big Banks and destroy the present government by replacing it with a more representative one -- but don't destroy the use of banks or return to anarchy.raja
Boycott Big Banks • Vote Out Incumbents
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Originally posted by rajaI'm suggesting a People's rebellion that will force out the existing government, much like the American rebellion when they refused to pay taxes. Then, put in a government that will represent the People.
In other words, keep government, but throw out the parasites that now infest it.
I fail to see what taxation has to do with it.
Originally posted by rajaAnd . . . starve the Big Bankers, by the People transferring their money to small local banks.
The present government says the Big Banks are TBTF, but the reality is that the People will decide that, not Goldman-Sachs gofers.
So, yes, destroy the Big Banks and destroy the present government by replacing it with a more representative one -- but don't destroy the use of banks or return to anarchy.
The big banks right now don't want 'hot money' deposits. They're more than happy to let all the little people move their non-fee generating money into credit unions, because with ZIRP the banks actually lose money on deposits.
In normal times the banks would have to suck up the deposit pain, but with the Fed window today there is very little need for depositor cash.
Lastly, what makes you think the credit unions are going to be any better?
Are we already forgetting this:
http://www.curegister.net/2011/06/nc...er-losses.html
NCUA sues MBS dealers to recover losses to corporates
06/20/11: NCUA sues J.P. Morgan, RBS securities units. Filed Monday, the suits seek more than $800 million in recoveries related to mortgage-backed securities that helped sink five corporate federal credit unions, including U.S. Central and WesCorp. More suits may follow.
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
At zero interest rates, the people don't need banks except to cash cheques. So, what I think I see is that people are hoarding cash, maybe even at home, maybe even in walls, in floors, maybe as insulation from cold. Money has stopped moving. Velocity = zero. This is very de-flationary. And..... and....and, why loan money onto real estate at 3.75% return when the 3.75% (and much more) can be lost in the first year of holding a de-flating real estate asset that had to be repoed?
Oh yes, in a pure de-flation, money is worth more sitting idle as cash, in some wall or safe-deposit box somewhere. The bank can do so, the people can do so, or both can do so and probably are doing so. The bank and the people both may be depositing money at zero return into short-term government bonds, just to be safe. But the point is: the cash disappears from circulation no matter how much the Fed prints.
In slow motion for slow-thinkers like myself: Zero interest rates force money out of circulation. That drop in velocity of money to zero means (m X v) = 0. Incomes fall because jobs disappear, and employers have less sales income to be able to hire workers. Interest income to savers vanishes, so they can't spend. That forces prices down because there is no money in circulation. Even whatever Bernanke prints at the Fed stays at the Fed, to decorate or insulate the walls of the Fed because no-one can pay-back loans. Loan demand vanishes, and no-one wants to lend...... In other words, at zero interest rates, everything in the economy freezes solid everywhere, and maybe even in Europe next. It's like the chill from America could spread outward to the entire world.
Scary stuff this de-flation, but still less scary than the bouts of inflation we've had for decades.Last edited by Starving Steve; November 08, 2011, 01:47 PM.
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Hi Starving Steve,
Deflation is not better. Deflation works with inflation to sheer the sheep best. The public would catch on to a steady inflation and they thought they did catch on by seeking inflation hedges which are nothing but deflationary traps. As Jefferson said "First by inflation, then by deflation" . Its all part of the process.
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
I agree. How do you hurt banks with 0 interest rates? Even if you de-leverage, they go internationally for higher interest rates and whine like a stuck pig when they don't get the face value where oblamo and burn-us-easy bottle feeds them with the blood of the middle class and wipes their sloppy, dripping, double-ten, leveraged chins.
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Originally posted by Starving Steve View PostClass, let's review some of the oddities of this Great Recession:
1st off, havent you heard?
'this Great Recession' = over, dude - the 'great recovery' has been underway since jan2009, after our latest cabal of fearless leaders bailed out AIG, GS, JPM and the rest of the TBTF-club in lower manhattan, along with the auto/gov unions, the welfare class, et al - right? well... thru last year, anyway - they havent the first foggiest notion of what to do for next year, but hey! why quible with success? - i mean just because theres a bunch of mal-content whiners protesting in the streets, thats nothing to be concerned about, what with all the good news we got coming out of the beltway?
no worries, mate, it's all good....
a.) Stocks are barely steady in nominal dollars but apparently rising in value in real dollars----- if for no other reason than the value of the dividend stream is forcing upward the bid on the stocks, regardless of barely steady corporate profits. Yes, one gets a headache trying to comprehend this. Let's sum up: stocks paying let's say a dividend of 4% are bid strongly, regardless of barely steady corporate profits and regardless of deflationary stock market conditions. So, by catching a bid in a deflationary economy with a steady ( maybe even rising dollar foreign exchange value ), the stocks might be actually rising in value in real terms.
i mean, just look at the bonuses they've paid themselves for saving the system for the rest of us, so we can rest easy now and pump whats left of our rapidly-evaporating savings back into the casino... uh... i mean.. stock markets - the barney-bill has fixed all the problems with the games being rigged and the dow is back up above 12000 again, so clearly the good times have returned, right? - and didnt unemployment drop again this past month?.. well... just because millions of 99'rs are exhausting their benefits/dropping from the list doesnt mean things arent getting better - right?
b.) No matter how much a real estate market wants to inflate the price of homes/land/rents, the market has to drop if there are no mortgages and/or if the currency ( the beaver buck or the dollar or the pound, Euro, whatever ) is rising in foreign exchange value. And a currency rises in value if the currency is in short supply and the market requires that currency. Shortages trump all other conditions. The currency (or any commodity) in short supply has to catch a bid.
c.) If Starving Steve is correct, Bernanke is a genius. He has faked-out the markets by telling the markets that money is being dropped by helicopters to rescue.... whatever.
d.) As the debt pyramid implodes, the money supply shrinks if for no other reason than the fact that money is backed by debt. Heretofore, the more debt the banks could compile, the more money they could borrow from the central banks. But the reverse is also true: the less debt, the less borrowing power from the Fed or Bank of Canada, or whatever. As a result of less borrowing from the central bank or even a retirement of debt by banks to the central bank, the money supply goes flat. Then the money supply can, and probably would shrink. The economy might grow marginally because of population growth, but the money supply might actually shrink..... Hence, we might be entering into a de-flation, and this could accelerate.
e.) If the de-flation accelerates into a panic, the central bank would be forced to print and inject money into the banking system. That could cause a hyper-inflation as an over-reaction to the acceleration of de-flation. Oh yes....
and merely because the price of just about everything (but labor) has skyrocketed... well... besides i-pads.. that doesnt mean that we have any inflation - i mean, he really is worried about deflation, still - right? well... even if the only thing that is deflating is the funny-money assets listed on the banks balance sheets - why would that be a problem, since the politicians fixed that one by changing the mark-to-market rules
f.) In a de-flation, the next market to implode would be in what, and where? Who knows? And which banks lent into that market and to whom? What collateral do these banks have for the loans that are now going to go sour?
laissez les bons temps rouler, i say
g.) What is interesting, downright remarkable, is that as all of this continues to unravel, none of this risk was apparent during the Reagan/ Laffer /Greenspan boom. This was almost a repeat of the same series of mistakes made during the 1920's boom, and those mistakes during that boom were not apparent either until everything began to unravel during the October panic of 1929.
[Class: Maybe you might tack this blog onto the door of your local Republican Party headquarters. Give this blog to your local Republican Party Member of Congress. Maybe tack this blog onto the door of your local university economics department. You might also place this blog directly into the hand of Dr. Arthur Laffer at Stanford University. ]Last edited by lektrode; November 08, 2011, 05:26 PM. Reason: since jan09 _after_ but why quible on detail
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Originally posted by don View Postlektrode, I see by your posts you are on the prowl. Locked, loaded and ready. Forward!
thanyou, thanyouvermush...
guess i was in good company today, in the parody dept:
http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthr...-Bernstein-but...
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Re: Odious Debt - Michael Hudson
Originally posted by c1ue View PostIf you're going to break the law by not paying taxes, why not break the law and just throw the rascals out?
1. By with holding taxes, you keeping your assets safe from a group of people who are not representing you, and who are quite happy to screw you by making you debt slaves.
2. Tax withholding is faster than voting (depends on a country's elective and tax cycles).
3. Tax withholding doesn't require a majority to be effective.
4. Tax withholding cannot be watered down by compromise, as with election.
5. Tax withholding brings awareness to the issue, which is wealth and power disparity, helping to educate the public.
6. Tax withholding is easier to do than elective campaigning.
7. Tax withholding a good strategy when TPTB have dominated the media and subverted the election process.
8. Tax withholding is easier than protesting by sleeping outside in a park.
9. Tax withholding is not subject to vote tampering.
10. Tax withholding is on target because of its simplicity, unlike elections, where there a myriad of other issues that cloud the process (like what consenting adults do in private, abortion, gun rights, etc.)
The big banks right now don't want 'hot money' deposits. They're more than happy to let all the little people move their non-fee generating money into credit unions, because with ZIRP the banks actually lose money on deposits.
In normal times the banks would have to suck up the deposit pain, but with the Fed window today there is very little need for depositor cash.
Lastly, what makes you think the credit unions are going to be any better?raja
Boycott Big Banks • Vote Out Incumbents
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