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US buying bubble could burst the world economy
The Mail & Guardian ^
| Monday, July 28, 2003
| Larry Elliot
Posted on 07/28/2003 11:55:29 AM PDT by Willie Green
click here to read article
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To: sourcery; arete
ping!
2
posted on
07/28/2003 11:56:47 AM PDT
by
AntiGuv
(™)
To: Willie Green
I've been worrying about this stuff for a while, but what are small-fry like us to do other than practice our subsistence gardening technique?
3
posted on
07/28/2003 12:01:25 PM PDT
by
adam_az
(This space for rent.)
To: Willie Green; A. Pole
We're doomed, doomed I tell you!!
To: Willie Green
Well, as most most economists would say, "on the other hand..."
5
posted on
07/28/2003 12:07:13 PM PDT
by
moni kerr
(Lead, follow or get the hell out of the way)
To: moni kerr
No kidding. Something people always forget is the value of investment in real property is carried on the govt books at historical cost, not current appraised value. All the national parks and every acre of federal land is grossly undervalued on the books. There's a lot of property value supporting the balance sheet. Also, the deficit numbers are but a spit in the collective bucket when compared to output.
6
posted on
07/28/2003 12:24:39 PM PDT
by
kinghorse
To: Willie Green
Im becoming psychic..... as soon as this article got gloomy I knew you had posted it
7
posted on
07/28/2003 12:30:02 PM PDT
by
woofie
To: Willie Green
"Far too little attention has been paid to the giant tab the US has been running with the rest of the world in order to satisfy demand for goods and services that cannot be provided domestically, with economic logic turned on its head to argue that the spendthrift habits of the world´s biggest economy are actually a good thing."This is where the author shows his complete ignorance and incompetence to objectively analyze the economic situation. There isn't a single thing on earth that we cannot provide domestically with the exception of a couple of trace elements that don't exist under our soil. Damn near everything we import was invented by us, now due to regulations here in the US and subsidies overseas, those goods are made more cheaply "over there". That does indeed need to stop - and then numbnuts like this POS will really scream when their economies fully tank because the manufacturing came back here. This is obviously written by a Euroswine.
Nice try, Willie, but it ain't gonna fly around here. But I'm happy that this Chicken Little is worried.
8
posted on
07/28/2003 12:35:09 PM PDT
by
11B3
(We live in "interesting times". Indeed.)
To: Willie Green
It did not take long for the "don't worry be happy" crowd to get on this thread. But then again, most of them do not have a grasp of history before 1980.
9
posted on
07/28/2003 12:48:52 PM PDT
by
Beck_isright
(Remember the Blue Ridge Corporation!!!! Damn the torpedoes and SEC, full speed ahead!)
To: Beck_isright
It did not take long for the "don't worry be happy" crowd to get on this thread. The "always worry, never be happy, we're all gonna die" crowd always gets here first. Good economic news deprresses you guys more than it does Tom Daschle.
10
posted on
07/28/2003 12:59:42 PM PDT
by
Iowegian
To: 11B3
. . . due to regulations here in the US and subsidies overseas, those goods are made more cheaply "over there". The single biggest contributor to the flight of jobs overseas is not regulations and subsidies, but a U.S. dollar that has been the strongest currency in the world by a wide margin over the last 15 years.
To: Tauzero; Starwind; David; Soren; Fractal Trader; Libertarianize the GOP; zechariah; farmfriend; ...
FYI
12
posted on
07/28/2003 1:01:02 PM PDT
by
sourcery
(The Evil Party thinks their opponents are stupid. The Stupid Party thinks their opponents are evil.)
To: kinghorse
You may have a point that fedgov land is undervalued but why do they seem intent on leveraging to the hilt assets such as this....and who's holding the note?
13
posted on
07/28/2003 1:05:35 PM PDT
by
american spirit
(ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION = NATIONAL SUICIDE)
To: Beck_isright
A worrier dies a thousand deaths, an optimist but once...
14
posted on
07/28/2003 1:18:51 PM PDT
by
chilepepper
(The map is not the territory -- Alfred Korzybski))
To: chilepepper
Anyone not worried at this point just isn't paying attention or has other deficiencies.
15
posted on
07/28/2003 1:21:19 PM PDT
by
american spirit
(ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION = NATIONAL SUICIDE)
To: Willie Green
marking
16
posted on
07/28/2003 1:27:55 PM PDT
by
djreece
(McClintock: The BEST candidate for CA governor!)
Comment #17 Removed by Moderator
To: Alberta's Child; Willie Green
The single biggest contributor to the flight of jobs overseas is not regulations and subsidies, but a U.S. dollar that has been the strongest currency in the world by a wide margin over the last 15 years. So manufacturing will come back now that the dollar has lost 20% of it's value?
18
posted on
07/28/2003 1:59:37 PM PDT
by
forester
(Reduce paperwork -- put foresters back in the forest!)
To: optimistically_conservative
We're doomed, doomed I tell you!! Are we more doomed than we were for Y2K?
19
posted on
07/28/2003 2:02:28 PM PDT
by
verity
To: forester
Not necessarily. Nobody is going to shut down a plant in Malaysia and move back to the U.S. just because the dollar has lost 20% of its value in recent months. The issue isn't where the dollar is today, but where someone thinks it's going to be over the next couple of decades.
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