Commentary on the economy, the markets, and business

Global financial crises bring people and nations closer together

In the news today ...

... the WSJ joins the hey-look-at-how-Sweden-dealt-with-its-big-financial-crisis parade (which may well have begun right here on this blog):

As it happens, the U.S. already seems to be applying some of the key lessons from the Swedish crisis. The government-backed sale of investment bank Bear Stearns Cos. "was handled exactly as the Swedish crisis was," says Anders Aslund, a Swedish economist at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

... Alex Tabarrok argues that the fact that people all over the world have lost money on American subprime mortgages is a good thing:

The losses, of course, are regrettable and the desire to find and apportion blame for the crisis among investors, home buyers, mortgage brokers, credit analysts and regulators is understandable. We should and will learn lessons. And yet, despite problems with transparency one of those lessons ought to be that the crisis would have been worse if the losses had been more concentrated.


... and Alan Greenspan makes his latest and most detailed defense of his last years as Fed chairman on some London newspaper's Website:

I am puzzled why the remarkably similar housing bubbles that emerged in more than two dozen countries between 2001 and 2006 are not seen to have a common cause. The dramatic fall in real long term interest rates statistically explains, and is the most likely major cause of, real estate capitalization rates that declined and converged across the globe. By 2006, long term interest rates for all developed and major developing economies declined to single digits, I believe for the first time ever.

Doubtless each individual housing bubble has its own idiosyncratic characteristics and some point to Fed monetary policy complicity in the US bubble. But the US bubble was close to median world experience and the evidence of monetary policy adding to the bubble is statistically very fragile. ...

It's just like Todd Rundgren once said (and has apparently been saying again lately):

One world
Whoa, its our world
Yeah, yeah, one world
Whoa, its our world
Yeah, yeah

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  • 1

    While most people in the financial world now believe that we are already in the beginning stage of a malignant recession, there are still some who decide to think otherwise -- the ostrich syndrome in perpetuation.
    So this is yet another instance when people tend to be getting closer and closer in time of severe crisis. Such feelings of warmth, support and care had helped most people to weather through threatening storms of all kind in history. We have had similar economic scenarios before in the past century, but so far we did not seem to be well prepared enough to counter them effectively and quickly. This time, are we really ready to learn a lesson from the deadly economic hurricane? Think about it. Ignore it at our own peril.

  • 2

    INDIAN COMPETITION MAKES USA RECESS

    There has been lots of competition from India, and western countries are losing their business like satellite launching, avation, other high end technologies, this will put West out of money and there will be no furthur progress, technical development was done by westerners from 19th century onwards, when asians come into picture there will be lots of negative progress into stone age..

    "India for ever doesnt have domain knowledge people" as commented by General Electric head in a TV(may be NDTV or CNBC) interview, he also said they are suitable for doing sevice type of work non critical work( including IIT and technical graduates), what will happen to Honeywells aviation machines if they put substandard code or design in avionics???

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