Charting The Ten Year Prelude To The Keynesian Endgame
Posted by Québec de Droite in Banque centrale, Finance - Bourse - Spéculation, États-Unis on mercredi 23 mars 2011
Extrait de: Charting The Ten Year Prelude To The Keynesian Endgame, From John Lohman, 03/19/2011 17:23 -0400
2001-2010: Ten Year Prelude To The Keynesian Endame
Alas, one hundred years of the government’s attempts to mute the natural business cycle are slowly and painfully coming to an end.
A period where the government proactively encouraged consumption until it became 70% of the economy, we produced very little, and our savings rate reached zero.
A period where home ownership was promoted as the ultimate supreme goal until the last citizen that could fog a mirror yet was least able to afford it was suckered in.
As this leveraged consumption pyramid is finally ending, the government and central bank have embarked on one final mission to prop it up using the same tools that got us here in the first place: more leverage.
Only this time on a logarithmic scale.
Unfortunately, the scale is so large that it will not only guarantee an endgame, but it will accelerate it.
The visual below contains a few pieces of evidence that seem to confirm this, namely that over a ten year period: the consumer is stuck with an underwater balance sheet and the Fed’s attempt to create yet another bubble is only making it worse; outside of government efforts, the economy is unable to generate sustainable job growth; and finally, the leverage scheme is so large that it no longer has a positive impact on growth (“debt saturation”).
This entry was posted on mercredi 23 mars 2011 at 18:02 and is filed under Banque centrale, Finance - Bourse - Spéculation, États-Unis. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response.
# by Sébas - 23 mars 2011 20:43
Excellent !
Question -qui n'a pas directement rapport avec ce texte- pour vous:
Les déficits actuariels des fonds de pension (70 ou 80 milliards), sont-ils -à 100%- comptés dans la dette totale du Québec (i.e. dans le 230 milliards) ?
Si oui, où est-ce que cela est indiqué dans les budgets du Qc ?
# by Québec de Droite - 24 mars 2011 08:22
Oui, le déficit actuariel est compris dans la dette brute du Québec.
Et la dette publique comprend la dette brute.
Si on diminue les attentes des régimes de retraite de la fonction publique, on diminue directement la dette du Québec.
# by Québec de Droite - 24 mars 2011 08:27
Elle est indiquée sur le tableau de la dette brute.
http://www.quebecdroite.com/2011/03/quebec-budget-2011-dette-brute-et.html
Par contre, seulement le montant qui manque pour satisfaire les attentes, selon le gouvernement : 28 milliards, selon le vérificateur : 45 milliards, en fonction de la méthode de calcul, comptable ou du marché.
# by Sébas - 24 mars 2011 12:59
Merci !
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