Showing posts with label royal bank of scotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label royal bank of scotland. Show all posts

Friday, February 27, 2009

Fire Up the Presses!

The Year of our Depression 2009 hasn't yet ended its second month, yet already a great sea of red ink is bathing the bailout-happy nations of the world. Japan's exports tanked 46% year-over-year in January; the Royal Bank of Scotland is haemorrhaging pounds like nothing else in British banking history; Fannie Mae put her lil' ol' hand out for more money after losing another $25.2 billion in fourth quarter of 2008.

Perhaps to top it all off, yesterday President Obama unveiled his $3.5 trillion budget, featuring $989 billion in new taxes. Oh, all these numbers are making our eyes bleed, dear Reader! We see a great tsunami of red ink barrelling down upon the economic landscape, and we hope to keep our head above all the mess.

Imagery aside, the implications of all these massive problems is severe: a great deal of pain and misery is required, if a society wants to honestly work its way back to fiscal health. That, however, isn't very popular with the average American, or Briton, for example. It's also political suicide to suggest such a thing: people do not want to work hard, to pay off the national bar tab, or all the gambling debts.

No, the only expedient way out of this mess, the one that is relied upon time and time again, is inflation. These debts will be inflated away into nothingness; President Obama's bloated budget makes this clear. He is only getting started with his spending spree, since he has to make up for the Baby Boomers and their underwater finances.

In summation, we turn to no less a sage that Ernest Hemingway:
The first panacea for a mismanaged nation is inflation of the currency; the second is war. Both bring a temporary prosperity; both bring a permanent ruin. But both are the refuge of political and economic opportunists.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Twilight of the United States?

We've been reading quite a bit recently about the U.S.S.R. Morbid curiosity? Perhaps, dear Reader, but not without an ulterior motive: Soviet Russia was the last major, industrialised nation to have a catastrophic meltdown. That's not to say we necessarily expect such a thing to happen here... but it's wishful thinking to say 'it can't happen' in the United States, or the United Kingdom, or the Eurozone, et cetera.

Such comparisons are not without their merit, especially as the government spending of the United States and United Kingdom are becoming ever-larger percentages of those nations' respective national economies. Large percentages of government spending in GDP are hallmarks of socialism... but if the government is the entirety of the economy, that's soviet socialism.

This potential transition is seen in moves like the U.K. nationalising the Royal Bank of Scotland, or the U.S. taking over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Quantitative easing and monetisation of debt can bee seen as further steps towards sovietism. Perhaps the final nail in that coffin is the comment by Dmitry Orlov, that President Obama is America's Gorbachev. Mr. Orlov is a smart man, and he saw the post-Soviet collapse first-hand. We take him seriously.