Posted on 03/25/2010 2:15:45 PM PDT by arthurus
One of the things that many people go through their entire lives without ever realizing is that conditions haven't always been the way they remember them to be. Due to the length of a typical lifetime and the number of those years that individuals are productive, it's reasonable to think that someone in their mid-60s could retire today and look back at the last 40 years only to conclude that what they just experienced was normal.
But, what if the last 40 years were anything but normal?
What if, in the world of finance and economics, it was all just a big bubble?
(Excerpt) Read more at seekingalpha.com ...
The only decision I made that really made a ton of money for me was selling my Florida house in 2005, when it should have been obvious -to anyone with three working brain cells- that the pin was about to touch the bubble.
Funny how all the Smart Boyz missed the signals I was seeing.
I just don't feel comfortable about giving investment advice on a Internet board.
But thanks for the compliment implied in the question.
I don’t know if it was a “once in a lifetime event” or not but we no need to do the right things to foster at least a part of it like lower taxes, bring unions to their senses and cut regulations and so on but I’m afraid Capitalism is way down on the list, somewhere between CB radios and “singing with Mitch Miller.” B-P B-(
I did the same. Sold a home in 2005 and made $$$. Put it into a new home, and I think not very speculatively, but wisely. Now, though, I worry about a collapse of everything.
I also own my own house with a relatively small mortgage.
If I were smart I’d sell it and rent. The fact that I haven’t already done this shows that I know it’s easier to say that then do it. I think housing prices will have to decline along with salaries of the people. We are in for an economic catastrophe. In a matter of years, not decades.
Wow. Spot on analysis.
That is my sense, too. If I continue to feel that way for awhile, I will opt for safety.
. . . and thanks.
Well, Empires generally last 200 years give or take. We had the British Empire from 1763 to 1963, at the beginning they defeated the French in the “French and Indian War” (well we call it that here where it started in Pittsburgh, PA, our local PBS station did a good documentary on it) or “Seven Years War” elsewhere. Then you go to 1963, the British Empire was almost gone with the massive decolonization of the late 1940’s through the 1960’s. That’s 200 years. If you take us, I would put the beginning of our strength at the “War of 1812.” We might not have won that war decisively but it proved to England and the world that we were not a pushover and could stand up and defend ourselves. If you add 200 years, you get 2012, we are almost there now. Of course, it isn’t always exact, there were some Empires that lasted a little longer or shorter but it seems like they are in the 200 year range.
“If families were content to live the lifestyle of 1960 then for most people one income would be sufficient.”
If the thieves in government weren’t taking 40 PERCENT OF OUR FAMILIES INCOME we could live our nice lifestyle and pay for our own retirement at a fairly young age. Americans are not living beyond their means. They remain the most productive people on the planet that are being enslaved by out of control government.
Forget this article. There is only one bubble we have to deal with and that is ever expanding government. This bubble must be popped and never allowed to grow again.
I wouldn't go back to the War of 1812. We were way too vulnerable until about the time of the Civil War. Even then the Brits & French were considering intervention.
I would date the US empire from around 1900 when our economic output began to outstrip the British. I think that the US 'Empire' was neatly piggy-backed off the British Empire.
This is one of the most interesting, and informative, threads I’ve read in a long time. I have always been fascinated by the rise and fall of empires and it does seem to me that ours is about to end, if it hasn’t already.
American decadence started in earnest in 1968...
“Summer of Love.”
Applies to everything. What if summer temperatures seem warmer over my insignificant lifetime. OOPS, must be do to man. Never mind the 6 billion years before that...
We have some extremely long economic cycles, and of course how can you compare what comes after dropping the gold standard to what comes after. There is a shift. Your lifetime observed “normal” may be anything but.
I agree.
Length of empires can really vary...so you can’t really judge by average years. Quicky lookup gave me these dates:
Ottoman Empire: 1299 to November 1, 1922
Western Roman Empire: 44 BC - 476 AD
Eastern Roman Empire: 44 BC - 1453 AD
Holy Roman Empire 962 - 1806
Mongol Empire 1206 - 1264
Achaemenid Empire 550-330 BC
Fatimid Caliphate 909-1171
Akkadian Empire 2334 BC to 2083 BC
Rashidun Caliphate 632-661
And there are others, like the empire of Alexander the Great, that don’t outlast the leader before shattering into smaller groups. There seem to be a variety of factors involved why one organization can grow and stay stable, and another cant.
As for comparing the US to the British empire, well, the US doesn’t really and has never really had much of an empire - we weren’t capturing areas to turn into mercanilist colonies the way Britain was. But the core of Britain, England, and then Wales and later Scotland and Ireland have been a rather stable political unit. If you want to compare the rise of the UK in a fair way, you’d have to push your start back to ca. maybe 1100s with Henry II, or the 1300s, when the Commons really began to assert itself, if you’d prefer, maybe to bump it up to the Tudors , when it began to claw its way out of being a backwoods, nearly third world resource producer status and moving into resource manufacturer and world exploring nation. It may have peaked in power ca. 1900, but it has been a player and a power to be reckoned with for at least 500 years, maybe more.
Don’t know where the US is going at this point...but major countries as important spheres of influence and power often are players more than 200 years...some are flashes in the pan, barely lasting the lifetime of an important leader, some hang on for more than a millennium. It just varies.
A lot of people believe that America would have fallen in the mid-1900s, were it not for WWII. Basically, this theory is that there is a long up, then down, pattern to major economic powers (the first up wave caused by credit, innovation, and open markets, with the downwave caused by debt, market stagnation, and competition). For the US, this pattern was interrupted because suddenly the US was the only real economy world-wide, and the devastation caused an unprecedented surge in world wide demand.
Anyway, this theory holds that this created a second wave for the US, which was particularly dramatic and rapid. And that our debt, the worldwide glut of everything (from factories, to housing, to engineers, to everyday items), will cause an equally sharp and dramatic downturn.
btt
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