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| The Fed: Forever Blowing Bubbles | | Print | |
| Written by Bob Adelmann | ||||||||||||
| Monday, 11 January 2010 13:53 | ||||||||||||
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The roots of the present Great Recession stretch back to the bursting of the last bubble — the tech bubble — in the late 1990s. As the stock market declined sharply, the Fed under then-chairman Alan Greenspan lowered interest rates in an attempt to keep the economy from collapsing. The Times succinctly noted in its overview of the credit crisis that "lower interest rates make mortgage payments cheaper, and demand for homes began to rise, sending prices up. In addition, millions of homeowners took advantage of the rate drop to refinance their existing mortgages. As the industry ramped up, the quality of the mortgages went down." But a destabilizing contraction in nationwide house prices does not seem the most probable outcome. To be sure, the recent marked increase in the investor share of home purchases suggests rising speculation in homes. [Owner occupants are rarely home speculators because to sell, they must move.] However, nominal house prices in the aggregate have rarely fallen and certainly not by very much. And even should more-than-average price weakness occur, the increase in home equity as a consequence of the recent sharp rise in prices should buffer the vast majority of homeowners. Bernanke remained blind to the obvious as well. At a House of Representatives hearing in February 2006, he said, “The housing market has been very strong for the past few years. Housing prices have been up quite a bit. Residential investment has been very strong.” He continued, “There are some straws in the wind that housing markets are cooling a bit [but] the decline in activity … will be moderate. So we expect the housing market to cool but not to change very sharply.” By June 2008, Bernanke finally acknowledged the collapsing economy, but said that “the risk that the economy has entered a substantial downturn appears to have diminished over the past month or so.” Deception has always worked to the FED's advantage. It remained politically untouchable until Ron Paul got over 300 House members to co-sponsor a bill to audit the FED. At the heart of all central banking is deception. The central bank bails out the largest banks when their deception threatens their survival. Once Congress is able to audit the Fed, the duplicity and deception will be exposed to the light of day. That will build pressure to abolish the Fed once and for all and restore the constitutional mandates about coin and currency to their rightful place. Photo of Greenspan (left) and Bernanke: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (6)
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Bonnie
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Wha...???? ...the Federal Reserve “failed to recognize the last bubble,… This statement has me completely puzzled. The Federal Reserve, working in cooperation with the last several administrations, CREATED the d@#n thing in the first place! |
Bonnie
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Spammers Captcha doesn't work with these ugg pin heads. Either their ip(s) need blocking, or the admin needs to remove their posts as soon as they are noticed. |
aa
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s Captcha doesn't work with these ugg pin heads. Either their ip(s) need blocking, or the admin needs |
Lawrence Anthony Florek
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Mr. We're not connecting all the dots. First of all The Fed can not create a bubble. That's impossible. Only We The People can do that with out irrational spending. I believe there was a term coined not too long ago "irrational exuberance". They're both same, same. Anyway, while Greenspan et al can contribute to influencing the economy in great ways as in lowering interest rate they can not create bubbles. However, here's the rub... their cronies can GREATLY PROFIT from bubbles as in sweep all the foam and froth off the top of every bubble before it collapses. You see as for the reat of us with just $4,000. per average depositer... we are not thinking that way because it seems like a lot of effort for just say $400. bucks. Well, you get the picture. |
Burt Potter
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... Believe me the FED along with the U.S. Government and the media can get the majority of people to do whatever they want. Form bubbles, pop bubbles, approve of wars, disapprove, abhor terrorists, love the same terrorists, embrace immorality, abhor immorality (all right I went to far on the last one.) God bless and everyone please open their eyes to the total corruption of the media, government and the fed. |
mark keller
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Counterfeiting is a felony Gee.. I thought counterfeiting US currency was a felony. If any of us "too small to save" people print $100 bills on OUR computers, we're in FBI handcuffs in no time. Bernanke counterfeits an avalanche of US curency for all his rich friends and he's portrayed as some kind of hero, the arsonist who takes credit for extinguishing the fire he set. (Except it's still burning, Ben, big time!) Bambi Ben, welded to the train tracks in chains of his own making! Can you hear it coming Ben? |





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