wayneL
VIVA LA LIBERTAD, CARAJO!
- Joined
- 9 July 2004
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For some silly reason, this tune just popped into my head with modified lyrics...
"The Yanks are turning Japanese, the Yanks are turning Japanese, I really think so, dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-doh, turning Japanese, I think they're turning Japanese, I really think so, dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-doh...."
I'm worried now. Will I have to pay royalties????
Does "Capitalism" have a "use by" date?
For some silly reason, this tune just popped into my head with modified lyrics...
"The Yanks are turning Japanese, the Yanks are turning Japanese, I really think so, dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-doh, turning Japanese, I think they're turning Japanese, I really think so, dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-doh...."
I'm worried now. Will I have to pay royalties????
You're giving away your age there Jeff....
...whoops, so am I!:
By the way how many banks have gone bust so far?
During the S&L crisis in the 80s and 90s I think over 700 went down. A little way to go to match it.
For some silly reason, this tune just popped into my head with modified lyrics...
"The Yanks are turning Japanese, the Yanks are turning Japanese, I really think so, dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-doh, turning Japanese, I think they're turning Japanese, I really think so, dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-doh...."
I'm worried now. Will I have to pay royalties????
With the Treasury printing presses working overtime, the taxpayer takes a double hit through the inflationary effects of the bail out. Inflation is a hidden tax.
Does "Capitalism" have a "use by" date?
I would add that the system we have at present in the Anglo world isn't really true capitalism; it's a sort of contrived capitalism some elements of socialism for the richest and the poorest.Does "Capitalism" have a "use by" date?
The question is what ideology would you replace it with? The other systems of distributing capital to buy goods and services have been grossly inefficient and have led to regular, and well documented, humanitarian disasters let alone wealth generation. They would be hugely unpopular with the 'working families' who drive the agenda in democracies the world over. There may be some dissaffection with the current erosion in personal wealth but noone would be advocating a return to big government, socialism or 'worse'. I mean where is the reward in that?
The fact is that we need the financially engineered results to generate the cash flow needed to feed consumption within an average Western lifespan. With that comes a 'bubble economy'. I can see the rate of savings increasing to deal with the bubble bursting in the medium term but I cannot see many swapping the Holden for an ox & plough and collectivisation.
The paradigm ain't broke while we are still living off the fat of the land. All that is being foregone at the moment is some of the fat in the system. It would need the depression or worse to change that .
i think we need to move a bit in the socialism direction on the capitalism/socialism divide.
I would add that the system we have at present in the Anglo world isn't really true capitalism; it's a sort of contrived capitalism some elements of socialism for the richest and the poorest.
It's a capitalism that robs the middle class to prop up the lower and upper classes. It's a capitalism that has forgotten about economic cycles and has attempted to banish boom and bust, by only allowing boom. It's a capitalism that refuses to regard recession as natural, cleansing, cathartic and important to clean out malinvestment. It's a capitalism that has turned moral hazard into a virtue. It is a capitalism that has embraced the most perverted forms of socialist economics while maintaining a profit motive, resulting in greed without consequence.
Except that the consequences are now emerging.
This capitalsim HAS reached is use by date and as a society we need to choose either true capitalism or socialism.
True capitalism has cycles. People win and lose, enterprise triumphs and fails, industries come and go.
We probably wouldn't like capitalism in it's purest form, therefore we will always have elements of socialism; welfare for the needy, regulation to protect the consumer, and a little social tinkering here and there. That's OK, we have to have a heart, and we can afford it, but this perverted Keynesian monster is dying and it need to be taken out to the back 40 and be put down.
The troubling thing is that "they" don't want to let it die (unsurprisingly), so instead of giving it the green injection now and letting it die peacefully and with dignity, it will die later, writhing in agony, flailing about and unconsciously kicking the crap out of anything within proximity... perhaps we are seeing the beginning of that process now.
Yep this capitalism is broken and we need a new model... fast.
PS- can anyone tell I haven't done economics
Update:
1.00 AUD = 18,137,104,876.31 ZWD
The ZWD is strengthening, quick run out and get some.
This capitalsim HAS reached is use by date and as a society we need to choose either true capitalism or socialism.
I hope you're right, but don't forget there is is significant chunk of the Oz population who consider Gough Whitless as "The Great Man". There is a socialist leaning gu'mint in power in Oz. Obama, (a Socialist) will apparently win in the Evil Empire. The gu'mint here in the UK is running to the left as fast as it can (before it loses in a landslide in 2 years to a left leaning Tory PartyThere is not a snow ball's chance in hell that the 'Anglos' will choose socialism as the dominant paradigm.
That's the sort of thing many "experts" were saying all the way over the top and down in 1929.Goldman Sachs JBWere said:buying the market in the 4800-5000 level on a 12-month view will prove to be an absolute winner strategy
GP, I wish you hadn't have made that look like I said it. I'm just providing someone else's opinion. Whoever it was. Maybe best they stay anon.That's the sort of thing many "experts" were saying all the way over the top and down in 1929.
Of course this time they might actually be right.
GP
Yep this capitalism is broken and we need a new model... fast.
Someone will be right. For the sake of my parents super, I'm hoping the ostitches, and these types of characters.
To me the commodity boom is another economic variable moving to accommodate this 'something for nothing' China boom. Inflation is finally moving on the back of commodity pricing which I see not as commodity price appreciation so much as cash depreciation. Which after so much wealth being sucked out of Western countries for some time is an inevitable pressure on the dollars of these countries.
I don't believe in the 'let the market rule' when not everyone is playing by the same rules. It is just selling our futures for cheaper import prices now.
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