the next "Great Depressions" great explanation


darkbeaver
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#1
Mikhail Khazin: U.S. will soon face second "Great Depression"

Renowned economist Khazin predicted U.S. financial crisis in 2000

By Yevgeniy Chernyx November 10, 2008 "--" - -- Five years ago, I ran the cultural section at Komsomolskaya Pravda. Publishing houses used to send me their new releases now and again for review. One day, after digging through the latest shipment of such literature, I stumbled upon a book titled, "Sunset of the Dollar -- and the End of the -- Americana."


I remember reading the title over to myself several times in disbelief. Way back when, Soviet Americanologists loved to debate the collapse of the U.S. financial empire. But this book was published in 2003.

I flipped through the pages, skimming over the text. The conclusions of the author — an economist named Mikhail Khazin — seemed convincing enough. So I gave the book to our economics columnist at KP Jenya Anisimov, who wrote a review and interviewed the author later at our editorial offices.

All these years, I kept Khazin in the back of my mind, and followed his career as he spoke at various conferences throughout Russia. He seemed certain the U.S. was teetering on the verge of an economic collapse, while other analysts were quick to refute his theory. Now, as his once unfathomable prognosis begins to come true, KP contacted Khazin for an interview.

Fired from the Kremlin!

KP: Mikhail Leonidovich, how did you end up predicting the current financial crisis?

Khazin: In the spring of 1997, the Kremlin established the Presidential Economic Department. I was made the deputy head of the unit. Our first task was to prepare a report for [former -- Boris] Yeltsin about the economic situation. We realized an economic crisis was pending in Russia and would take place in the late summer or early fall of 1998 if the country''s economic policies weren't changed.

KP: What view did the higher echelons take of your report?

Khazin: They didn't really take any view at all. No one read the text except for the deputy head of the administration and Yeltsin himself. In the summer of 1998, we were fired from the presidential administration for trying to stop a business project titled, "State Treasury Bills— Exchange Rate Corridor." This was the biggest financial scheme of the post-Soviet era. Just as we had predicted, an economic crisis gave way that --. Together with my colleagues, I continued researching the reasons behind the crisis.

After becoming seriously consumed in our studies of the U.S. financial system, we found an unprecedented parallel. Just as our T-bill market had sucked all the juices out of the Russian economy, the U.S. financial market was sucking the resources out of the entire planet. We realized a similar fate awaited the U.S. financial system. Our article was published in the summer of 2000 in the "Ekspert" magazine, titled, "Is the U.S. Digging for an Apocalypse." We concluded that it was just as impossible to avoid an economic crisis in the U.S. as the financial collapse in Russia.

Playing the idiot

KP: The U.S. obviously didn't listen to the song written by [the renowned Russian rock group] LUBE during perestroika, "Don't Play the Fool, America!" Seriously, though, what's the real reason for the economic collapse? Let's try to do this without any heavy duty financial terms...

Khazin: I'll try! The economic model that led to the collapse was the result of a crisis in the 1970s. This was a terrible financial crisis that was the result of surplus capital. Even the 19th-Century classics in economics literature concluded that capital grows faster than labor provides compensation. As a result, there is a lack of demand. In traditional capitalism, this problem is solved on account of crises in excess production. And in an imperialistic system, the problem is solved on account of capital outflow. But by the 1970s, these solutions had run their course. However, the internatinoal situation demanded the U.S. either make a great scientific and technological leap forward or lose the Cold War to the USSR. The administration of [-- Jimmy] Carter and the head of the Financial Reserve System Paul Walker developed a very tricky concept. For the first time in the history of capitalism, capitalists began helping others, issuing new currency in an effort to stimulate aggregate demand .

KP: They decided to switch on the printing press?

Khazin: Exactly. In the early 1980s, they started to stimulate demand through state support. For example, they launched the "Star Wars" program. As of 1983, they placed an emphasis on the household economies.

KP: You mean, they relied on the average citizens?

Khazin: --. For an entire quarter century, households received funds as a result of issuing new currency in larger and larger quantities.

KP: In other words, credit?

Khazin: --. The U.S. was able to make the next step in technological progress as a result of this excess demand. They accomplished the collapse of the USSR and numerous other significant fears. But... The boom took place thanks to resources that were supposed to provide for future growth. The country ate its own resources two generations ahead of time. The U.S. built up tremendous debt. This is clearly seen if we compare the growth of debt in U.S. households with the entire U.S. debt and GDP. The economy is growing at an annual rate of 2-3, or at a maximum 4 percent. But debt is increasing at a rate of 8-10 percent. KP: Well, let the debt keep growing... The U.S. lived fine up until now without a problem... Better than we did!

Khazin: Yes, the U.S. did create a very high standard of living by stimulating consumer demand. Generations lived without having to experience poverty. But it's impossible to live forever in debt. Household debt has now surpassed the national economy — more than $14 trillion. Now it's time to pay up. Of course, Wall Street tried to postpone this collapse. I won't go into detail about derivatives and other such financial assets, but this was just a gasp for air before an inevitable death.

Another problem in the U.S. is that powerful industries were built around this growing demand. Whatever decision Wall Street takes right now, the demand is going to fall. What will happen to these industries? In 2000, we estimated that 25 percent of the U.S. economy would disappear. Today, we think the number is closest to one-third — if not more.

KP: That's a lot!

Khazin: That's an incredible amount! But what exactly does this mean — the destruction of one-fourth of the U.S. economy? It means an uncontrollable increase in unemployment, a horrible depression, a sharp increase in the effect of social services on the budget... Now, the U.S. is jumping all over the place doing everything its can to rescue this fraction of the economy. The government is stimulating banks and manufacturing... But regardless, in 2-3 years, the U.S. will face a crisis similar to the Great Depression.

Who is Who

Mikhail Leonidovich Khazin was born in 1962. He studied mathematics at the Yaroslavl University and Moscow State University. In 1984-1991, he worked at the Soviet Academy of Sciences. In 1993-1994, he worked at the State Working Center of Economic Reforms. In 1995-1997, he was the head of the Credit Policy Department at the Economics Ministry. In 1997-1998, he was the deputy head of the Presidential Economics Department. In June 1998, he left state service. At the moment, he is president of the consulting firm, Neokon.
 
scratch
#2
d.b.,

Great research and an intriguing article.

It has made the situation much easier for me to comprehend.

I applaud you for this.

regards,
scratch
 
darkbeaver
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#3
I don't think anyone should feel intimitated about the complexities of modern economics, the devil is definitely in the details and the details are in very fine print. Sometimes I run accross articles by writers who know how to reach the hopelessly confused like me.
 
Kreskin
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#4
Well of course he would've predicted that in 2000. Who wasn't calling for depression durting the collapse of tech? I assume he was predicting something much earlier than 2008-2009.

What isn't built around growing demand? The newly crowned economic giants aren't fairing any better, most of them worse, when the US consumer stops buying. I see China just announced a 2-trillion dollar stimulus package to cope with their problems.
 
darkbeaver
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#5
Quote: Originally Posted by KreskinView Post

Well of course he would've predicted that in 2000. Who wasn't calling for depression durting the collapse of tech? I assume he was predicting something much earlier than 2008-2009.

What isn't built around growing demand? The newly crowned economic giants aren't fairing any better, most of them worse, when the US consumer stops buying. I see China just announced a 2-trillion dollar stimulus package to cope with their problems.

Good question, with so many sides and angles. It would seem to me that in the light of the economics of this last decade that sustainability isn't built on growing demand.
It's a long fall for the tallest, the USA will hit bottom harder than the eastern economic giants, a lot harder, and that's a good thing because the longer they exist as a viable power the more dangerous and destructive they will become in a hopeless struggle to remain imperial. They are vassels of Israel and as such completely expendable.
In any case there will be global depression of long duration, but the war will make us forget the economy and we'll be fully engaged saving the world from something.
 
darkbeaver
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#6
I guess nobody likes great depressions or hyperinflationary depressions or war to end depressions, jesus christ some economists are psycopathic monsters those ****ers would slit grannies throat for a few pieces of gold or points on some chart or profits indexed on misery futures.

We got a couple of years, only, to prepare for very tough very different times if you intend to hide from it you better start last year. If son O god dosn't get back soon he won't have SFA to save.
 
scratch
#7
Quote: Originally Posted by darkbeaverView Post

I guess nobody likes great depressions or hyperinflationary depressions or war to end depressions, jesus christ some economists are psycopathic monsters those ****ers would slit grannies throat for a few pieces of gold or points on some chart or profits indexed on misery futures.

We got a couple of years, only, to prepare for very tough very different times if you intend to hide from it you better start last year. If son O god dosn't get back soon he won't have SFA to save.

I don't think that anyone can quarrel with that!
 
darkbeaver
#8
Quote: Originally Posted by scratchView Post

I don't think that anyone can quarrel with that!

I was sort of hopeing for a good quarrel.
 
Avro
#9
 
darkbeaver
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#10
now if we could just stuff it in a basket and leave it on someones doorstep
 
Albertabound
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#11
Quote:

I was sort of hopeing for a good quarrel

I guess we need someone like Toro to come and say that everything is just fine....no problems here.

Good article DB
 
SirJosephPorter
#12
darkbeaver, I wouldn’t put too much faith in the predictions by a Russian economist as to what will happen in USA.

I am not saying that a depression won’t necessarily occur, but chances are against it. I will be very surprised if we do get a depression. Incidentally, is there an economic definition of depression, as there is of recession (negative GDP growth in two consecutive quarters)? How is depression defined?

The fact that Khazin predicted correctly something in the past is not an indicator that he will be right again.

I remember in 1987, the great financial guru Abbey Cohen correctly predicted the coming crash of the stock market. She advised her clients to pull out of the stock market ahead of the crash.

Unfortunately, she didn’t correctly predict the coming recovery. Within six months, stock market had made up what it lost during the crash and more. Overall her clients came out worse off.

So there will certainly be a recession (we probably are in one already). But depression? We just don’t know, although it seems highly unlikely.
 
darkbeaver
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#13
Quote: Originally Posted by AlbertaboundView Post

I guess we need someone like Toro to come and say that everything is just fine....no problems here.

Good article DB

Good-day Alberta, Toro's has been very busy trying to figure out how to get his money out of the stone I guess. I wouldn't tease him too much he's an ok guy for a currency trader. He owes me drinks too. So what's going on in the world Alberta? I think you've been studying this thing a lot longer than I have and you've always steered me in interesting informative directions.Boot me along a little further will you?
 
Albertabound
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#14
Quote:

So there will certainly be a recession (we probably are in one already). But depression? We just don’t know, although it seems highly unlikely.

GM stocks....$2.88
Chrysler........$1.74

The main industrial market of the US is now considered a small cap stock. Sorry to say but the US is being sucked into a black hole that it can never come out of. Funds are drying up for all the big corps and they will have no choice but to lay off employees in order to keep the remaining stock holders happy and without jobs ....there is no economy.....and the depression begins.
 
darkbeaver
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#15
Quote: Originally Posted by SirJosephPorterView Post

darkbeaver, I wouldn’t put too much faith in the predictions by a Russian economist as to what will happen in USA.

I am not saying that a depression won’t necessarily occur, but chances are against it. I will be very surprised if we do get a depression. Incidentally, is there an economic definition of depression, as there is of recession (negative GDP growth in two consecutive quarters)? How is depression defined?

The fact that Khazin predicted correctly something in the past is not an indicator that he will be right again.

I remember in 1987, the great financial guru Abbey Cohen correctly predicted the coming crash of the stock market. She advised her clients to pull out of the stock market ahead of the crash.

Unfortunately, she didn’t correctly predict the coming recovery. Within six months, stock market had made up what it lost during the crash and more. Overall her clients came out worse off.

So there will certainly be a recession (we probably are in one already). But depression? We just don’t know, although it seems highly unlikely.

I was reading the clinicle description of great depressions just last week, I have the idea that it was a combination of factors like money supply, unemployment, GDP, debt and I seem to remember five or six quarters with negative growth, which incidentally we've already had depending on who's data you believe, all the shadow gov sights are more reliable than the officials. It seem highly likely that we will undergo a great depression in two or three years and collapse of the USD or what's left of it shortly afterward. I don't see what you base an economic recovery on Sir the pieces I read are singularly gloomy, most indicate severe contraction severe depression and war, it seems there is no way to put humpty back on the wall, so the best of circumstances might be default and or complete forgivness of debt.
 
Albertabound
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#16
Quote:

I wouldn't tease him too much he's an ok guy for a currency trader.

I'm sure he is. And it is his job to keep confidence in traders other wise he's out of work. I just can't get over the statements that "everything is fine" when clearly it was not and is not.
 
darkbeaver
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#17
Quote: Originally Posted by AlbertaboundView Post

GM stocks....$2.88
Chrysler........$1.74

The main industrial market of the US is now considered a small cap stock. Sorry to say but the US is being sucked into a black hole that it can never come out of. Funds are drying up for all the big corps and they will have no choice but to lay off employees in order to keep the remaining stock holders happy and without jobs ....there is no economy.....and the depression begins.

Well I guess it's going to be a wild couple of decades then. Some people don't believe that though Alberta, they believe Obama and the tooth fairie. Hey, the fundementals are strong. haha
 
Albertabound
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#18
Also take away the profits that someone like haliburton is making in Iraq and all the corporate profiteering going on there and then look at the GDP. It becomes a whole new ball game.
 
Albertabound
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#19
And DB we both know that the system is designed to be in debt. Banksters rule the world and there is nothing we can do about it but let it crash to the ground and hope that we do not allow them to as quoted

Quote:

"The bankers own the earth. Take it away from them, but leave them the power to create money, and with
the flick of the pen they will create enough money to buy it back again.
However, take away from them the power to create money,and all the great fortunes like mine
will disappear, for this would be a happier and better world to live in. But, if you wish to
remain the slaves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create money."
-Sir Josiah Stamp
Former Director of
The Bank of England

to create the whole mess all over again.
 
darkbeaver
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#20
I'm leaning towards global war as a way out for the west. I don't think there will be unanimous support for any US led plan and I believe everyone is delevereging as fast as possible so the global economy is already out of American control. This meeting of the G20 on the 15th should be a screaming match and a punch fest, everyone is afraid to leave the US as quartermaster and equaly afraid to be seen getting of the ship, of course Canadians don't have a choice because of geography but that's another story. We will notice that the military industrial complex remains intact the history I think suggests that it will be used to great effect. When you can't buy you have to steal, only this time it won't be so covert, it'll be in our faces armed rape of any resource in their reach.
 
Albertabound
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#21
and now with the war on terror as their excuse, they will have every right to do it. The made up "war on terror" is their green light to do what they want, when they want, and to whom ever they want.

What a wonderful world!
 
Scott Free
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#22
Great article db

The Russians can make some truly remarkable observations about us but where they always seem to fail is in their assessment of our savagery. The way out of a great depression for the capitalist system, as Karal Marks knew, is war. I suspect that was one of the initial intentions for the Iraq war as it seems our economists have mistaken war as a stimulus to the economy. War does very bad things to our economy but total war, that is, war with grievous consequences for all combatants does very well. The reason is simple: we see growth when we have to rebuild society. So my point is that such a war is most probably being planned out now. We need a all out war so we can start over or so the thinking goes. It is the "great game," as the demigods of our system often put it. It has been quite a problem for sometime in economics: we have no sustainable financial system developed. Everything we have requires rise and fall. So a consequence of the capitalist system is the destruction of itself. The Russians know this as do our elites. The Russians could have saved their own empire in the same way but choose instead to take the long route. Khazin seems to think the USA will take the same route. The same people who would sell their grandmothers for a few pieces of gold are the same ones now planning the destruction of our civilization. If you bare all this in mind then the activities of the elite make more sense IMO.
 
Kreskin
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#23
What system does that Russian genius wish to present that doesn't rely upon supply and demand nor will have any variation of economic growth on a permanent basis? There could a cabinet position for him in the Obama adminstration and a tickertape parade awaiting in New York if he has the answers.
 
Scott Free
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#24
I don't think a solution has been found. We could do like they did in the ancient Americas and just walk away from our cities and start over?

I think it would be nice to come up with a sustainable solution but unfortunately that possibility doesn't seems to be in our natures. Either we are building toward a future or destroying the one we have made already.
 
darkbeaver
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#25
Who are the Architects of Economic Collapse?
Will an Obama Administration Reverse the Tide?

By Michel Chossudovsky

--, November 9, 2008

Most Serious Economic Crisis in Modern History

The October 2008 financial meltdown is not the result of a cyclical economic phenomenon. It is the deliberate result of US government policy instrumented through the Treasury and the US Federal Reserve Board.
This is the most serious economic crisis in World history.
The "bailout" proposed by the US Treasury does not constitute a "solution" to the crisis. In fact quite the opposite: it is the cause of further collapse. It triggers an unprecedented concentration of wealth, which in turn contributes to widening economic and social inequalities both within and between nations.
The levels of indebtedness have skyrocketed. Industrial corporations are driven into bankruptcy, taken over by the global financial institutions. Credit, namely the supply of loanable funds, which constitutes the lifeline of production and investment, is controlled by a handful of financial conglomerates.
With the "bailout", the public debt has spiraled. America is the most indebted country on earth. Prior to the "bailout", the US public debt was of the order of 10 trillion dollars. This US dollar denominated debt is composed of outstanding treasury bills and government bonds held by individuals, foreign governments, corporations and financial institutions.
"The Bailout": The US Administration is Financing its Own Indebtedness

Ironically, the Wall Street banks --which are the recipients of the bailout money-- are also the brokers and underwriters of the US public debt. Although the banks hold only a portion of the public debt, they transact and trade in US dollar denominated public debt instruments Worldwide.

In a bitter twist, the banks are the recipients of a 700+ billion dollar handout and at the same time they act as creditors of the US government.

We are dealing with an absurd circular relationship: To finance the bailout, Washington must borrow from the banks, which are the recipients of the bailout.
The US administration is financing its own indebtedness.

Federal, State and municipal governments are increasingly in a straightjacket, under the tight control of the global financial conglomerates. Increasingly, the creditors call the shots on government reform.
The bailout is conducive to the consolidation and a centralization of banking power, which in turn backlashes on real economic activity, leading to a string of bankruptcies and mass unemployment.
Will an Obama Administration Reverse the Tide?
The financial crisis is the outcome of a deregulated financial architecture.
 
darkbeaver
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#26
Quote: Originally Posted by KreskinView Post

What system does that Russian genius wish to present that doesn't rely upon supply and demand nor will have any variation of economic growth on a permanent basis? There could a cabinet position for him in the Obama adminstration and a tickertape parade awaiting in New York if he has the answers.

Things will change drastically Kreskin, supply, demand, variation in growth all of these are economic knowns, the problem is the huge scale of the greed and corruption and obscene distribution. If those at the working end of any economy can not earn a living the economy is doomed. When two working parents are required to float a domestic boat you know your economy sucks. Maybe we could put the babies to work shortly after they begin to walk, I know lots of capitalists would love that. The more important question is, what change do you see as being corrective?
 
darkbeaver
Avatar
#27
Quote: Originally Posted by Scott FreeView Post

I don't think a solution has been found. We could do like they did in the ancient Americas and just walk away from our cities and start over?

I think it would be nice to come up with a sustainable solution but unfortunately that possibility doesn't seems to be in our natures. Either we are building toward a future or destroying the one we have made already.

I have with millions of others for over a hundred years voiced the opinion that we will have no peace or prosperity untill we rid ourselves of capitalists. You can't trust them you can't leave them unattended arround assets and you can't deal with them without getting burned. They have to go, permanently, or the rest of us will dwindle in numbers, rapidly. They are up against the wall right now, do the right thing, pull the trigger.
 
Avro
#28
Quote: Originally Posted by darkbeaverView Post

I have with millions of others for over a hundred years voiced the opinion that we will have no peace or prosperity untill we rid ourselves of capitalists. You can't trust them you can't leave them unattended arround assets and you can't deal with them without getting burned. They have to go, permanently, or the rest of us will dwindle in numbers, rapidly. They are up against the wall right now, do the right thing, pull the trigger.

You can trust commies?

Give your tiny head a shake.
 
Scott Free
#29
Quote: Originally Posted by darkbeaverView Post

I have with millions of others for over a hundred years voiced the opinion that we will have no peace or prosperity untill we rid ourselves of capitalists. You can't trust them you can't leave them unattended arround assets and you can't deal with them without getting burned. They have to go, permanently, or the rest of us will dwindle in numbers, rapidly. They are up against the wall right now, do the right thing, pull the trigger.

You're very wise comrade!
 
darkbeaver
Avatar
#30
--
Global systemic crisis Alert For Summer 2009:

The US Government Defaults on its DebtBy GEAB

November 10, 2008 "
GEAB N°28" (October 16, 200 - -In this 28th edition of the GEAB, LEAP/E2020 has decided to launch a new global systemic crisis alert. Indeed our researchers anticipate that, before next summer 2009, the US government will default and be prevented to pay back its creditors (holders of US Treasury Bonds, of Fanny May and Freddy Mac shares, etc.). Of course such a bankruptcy will provoke some very negative outcome for all USD-denominated asset holders. According to our team, the period that will then begin should be conducive to the setting up of a « new Dollar » to remedy the problem of default and of induced massive capital drain from the US. The process will result from the following five factors studied in detail further in this GEAB:

The recent upward trend of the US Dollar is a direct and temporary consequence of the collapse of stock markets

• Thanks to its recent « political baptism », the Euro becomes a credible « safe haven » value and therefore provides a « crisis » alternative to the US dollar

• The US public debt is now swelling uncontrollably

• The ongoing collapse of US real economy prevents from finding an alternative solution to the country's defaulting

• « Strong inflation or hyper-inflation in the US in 2009? », that is the only question.


Studying the case of Iceland can give an idea of the upcoming stages of the crisis. That is what our team has been doing ever since the beginning of 2006. This country indeed provides a good illustration of what the US and the UK should be expecting. It can be considered – and that is what most Icelandic people do today – that the collapse of Iceland's financial system came from the fact that it was disproportionate to the size of the country's economy.





Inflation in Iceland - 2003-2008 - Source Central Bank of Iceland

Financially speaking, Iceland thought of itself as UK (1), in the same way as, financially speaking, UK thought of itself as the US and the US thought of themselves as the entire world. It is therefore quite useful to study the case of Iceland (2) in order to understand the course of events that London and Washington will follow in the next 12 months (3).

What we see today is a double historical phenomenon:

. on the one hand, since September 2008 (as anticipated in the February 2008 edition of the GEAB - N°22), the whole planet has become aware that a global systemic crisis is unfolding, characterised by the collapse of the US financial system and its contagion to the rest of the world.

. on the other hand, a growing number of global players are beginning to act on their own, in reaction to the ineffectiveness of the measures advocated or implemented by the US though they are the centre of this global financial system. What happened with this first Euroland (or -- summit which took place on Sunday, October 12, 2008, and whose decisions, by their scope (close to 1,700-billion EUR) and their nature (4), resulted in a regain of confidence on financial markets from all over the world, is typical of the « post-September 2008 world ».




Map of deposit insurances in the EU - Source AFP - 10/09/2008

Indeed there is such a thing as a « post-September 2008 world ». According to our team, it is now clear that this past month will remain in the history books of the whole planet as the month when the global systemic crisis started; even if what is really at play is its decanting phase, the last of a series of four phases of the crisis described by LEAP/E2020 as early as June 2006 (5). As always when it comes to large human groups, the perception of change among the general public only occurs when change is already far on its way.

As a matter of fact, September 2008 is the month when the « financial detonator » of the global systemic crisis exploded. According to LEAP/E2020 indeed, this second semester 2008 is the time when « the world dives into the heart of the impact phase of the global systemic crisis » (6); which means for our researchers that, at the end of this semester, the world enters the « decanting phase » of the crisis, i.e. a phase when the outcome of the shock settles down. This phase is the longest (from 3 to 10 years, according to the country) and the one affecting the largest number of people and countries. It is also the phase when the components of new global equilibriums will start to appear, two of them being already described by LEAP/E2020 in this 28th edition of the GEAB in the graphic illustrations below (7).

Therefore, as we repeated it on and on since 2006, this crisis is far more important, in terms of impact and outcome, than the 1929 crisis. Historically, we are the very first players, witnesses and/or victims of a crisis affecting the whole planet, in a situation of unprecedented interdependence of countries (resulting from twenty years of globalisation) and people (the level of urbanization - and related dependence for all the basic needs – water, food, energy… - is also unprecedented). However, the 1929 experience and all its dreadful outcome, is still vivid enough in our collective memories to hope, if citizens are vigilant and leaders clear-sighted, that we will be spared from a « remake » leading to major conflagration(s).

Europe, Russia, China, Japan,... are certainly the collective players who can make sure that the unfolding implosion of today’s world power, i.e. the United States, does not drive the planet into a disaster. Indeed, except for Gorbachev’s USSR, empires have a tendency to strive in vain to reverse the course of History when they realize their might is escaping them. It then belongs to partner-powers to channel the process peacefully, as well as it belongs to the citizens and rulers of the concerned country to be clear-sighted and face the difficult times they are about to cross.





Total borrowings of US Depository Institutions from the US Federal Reserve (01/08/1986 – 10/09/200 - Source Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis

The « emergency repair » of international financial channels, achieved by the countries of the Eurozone at the beginning of this month of October 2008 (, should not hide three fundamental facts:

• The “repair” was necessary to curb the panic that threatened to squander the entire global financial system in just a few weeks, but what it heals temporarily is merely a symptom. It has just bought a bit of time, two to three months maximum, as the global recession and the collapse of the US economy (the table above shows the staggering increase of US banks’ borrowings from the Fed) will speed up and create new tensions in the economic, social and political fields, that must be anticipated and coped with as soon as next month (as soon as the “financial packages” have been implemented)

• The huge financial means allocated worldwide for « emergency rescues » of the global financial system, though they were necessary to put back in order the system of credit, are lost for the real economy when it is on the verge of facing a global recession

• The « emergency repair » results in further marginalization, and therefore weakening, for the United States, because it sets up processes that are contrary to those advocated by Washington for the allocation of the Hank Paulson’s and Ben Bernanke’s 700-billion USD --: bank recapitalisation by governments (a decision Hank Paulson has now come to follow) and interbank loan guarantees (in fact Euroland governments substitute to credit insurers, a mostly American industry at the centre of global finance since decades). These trends turn more and more decision-making relays and financial flows away from the United-States when because of the explosion of their public (9) and private debt they need them more than ever; not to mention pensions going up in smoke (10).

The last aspect shows how, in the coming months, solutions to the crisis and to its various sequences (financial, economic, social and political) will increasingly diverge: what is good for the rest of the world will not be good for the United States (11), and now, Euroland in the first place, the rest of the world seems determined to make its own choices.

The sudden shock that will result from the US defaulting in summer 2009 is partly due to this decoupling of decision-making processes of the world’s largest economies with regard to the US. It is predictable and can be dampened if global players start to anticipate it. As a matter of fact, it is one of the topics developed in this 28th edition of the GEAB: LEAP/E2020 hopes that the September shock has “educated” the world’s political, economic and financial policy-makers and made them understand that it is easier to act by anticipation than in a panic. It would be a pity if Euroland, Asia and oil-producing countries, as well as US citizens of course, discover one morning of summer 2009 that, after a long-week-end or bank-holiday in the US, their US T-Bonds and Dollars are only worth 10 percent of their value because a « new Dollar » has just been imposed (12).




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Notes:

(1) Iceland adopted 10 years ago all the principles of economic deregulation and « financieration » advocated and implemented in the US and UK. Reykjavik thus became some sort of a financial « -- » of London and Washington, in reference to the very Americano-British movie character Austin Powers. The three countries undertook to play the financial game of « -- », in reference to a fable by Jean de la Fontaine with a very unhappy end for the frog.

(2) Icelandic stocks collapsed 76 percent after a few days suspension designed to « avoid » a panic! Source: --, 10/14/2008

(3) On this subject, let's spend a few lines on the amount of the “financial package” announced by London, i.e. 640-billion EUR including 64-billion EUR to recapitalize banks and a further 320-billion EUR pay back those same banks’ debt (source: --, 10/09/200. With an economy in freefall to the image of the real-estate market, with a soaring inflation, with capital-based pensions going up in smoke and a currency at the lowest,… apart from increasing the public debt and weakening even more the Sterling pound, it is difficult to imagine how the plan can « rescue » British banks. Contrary to Eurozone banks, the British financial system, exactly like its US counterpart, is at the centre of the crisis, not a collateral victim. Gordon Brown may well compare himself to Churchill and Roosevelt together (Source: --, 10/14/200, in his ignorance of History, he seems to forget that neither Churchill nor Roosevelt had already spent 10 years in their country's governments when each of them had to cope with their « big crisis » (that goes for the US and the Bush administration – Paulson and Bernanke included - who all come from the problem and are certainly not part of the solution). Not to mention the fact that Churchill and Roosevelt organised summits such as Yalta or Tehran leaving the French and the Germans waiting at the door, while today it is him who waits at the door of the Euroland summit.

(4) Source: --, 10/13/2008

(5) Source: --, May 15, 2006

(6) Source: --, June 15, 2008

(7) LEAP/E2020 made a synthesis of its anticipations on the decanting phase of the crisis by means of a world map of the impact of the crisis based on the identification of 6 large groups of countries; and of an anticipatory schedule of the 4 financial, economic, social and political sequences over 2008-2013 for each of these regions.

( It is indeed the Eurozone which curbed the spiral of global panic. For weeks, the US and British initiatives followed one another without any effect. The eruption of a new collective player, the « Euroland summit », and the wide-ranging decisions it made, are a new and soothing phenomenon. It is for this very reason that Washington and London have systematically prevented such a summit from taking place ever since the Euro was launched, 6 years ago. A complete set of diplomatic gesticulation was required (preliminary meeting, pre-summit group photo,…) to make the British Prime Minister believe he was not set aside the process, when in fact there is no reason why he should take part in a Euroland Summit. In this edition of the GEAB, LEAP/E202020 comes back on the phenomenon and the long-term systemic consequences of this 1st Euroland Summit.

(9) The US financial rescue plan has already increased by 17,000 USD the debt owned by each US citizen. Source: --, 10/06/2008

(10) It is indeed 2,000-billion USD of capital-based pensions which evaporated in the past few weeks in the US. Source: --, 10/08/2008

(11) At least in the short-term. Indeed our team is convinced that it is not bad at all for the American people in the medium- and long-term if the system currently prevailing in Washington and New-York is fundamentally reappraised. This system has thrust the country into dramatic problems among which dozens of millions of US citizens now struggle, as illustrated in this article by the -- dated 10/11/2008.

(12) Even if it will be a minor-scale measure compared to the prospect of a US bankruptcy, those who think that it is time to invest again on financial markets may find useful to learn that the New York Stock Exchange has recently reviewed all its circuit-breaker thresholds as a result of ratings collapse. Source : --, 09/30/2008
 

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