Question:
America's Economy in Freefall?
anonymous
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
America's Economy in Freefall?
Nine answers:
anonymous
2007-11-02 01:15:40 UTC
the oil companies knew for many years of cars that could get allot better gas mileage and the electric car ... American good old greed is the Ruin of all the world





Kiddy-up Horse
?
2016-09-05 12:07:48 UTC
Roosevelt wasn't a saviour, that's fiction. The despair began in 1929. He was once no longer elected till 1932 and, as with any monetary cycles, the worst was once over. He was once in the back of the school of a quantity of social systems (social safeguard, welfare) however the questionable advantages of those systems didn't take final result till good after implementation. It would be argued that Hitler had extra to do with pulling this nation out of the despair that Roosevelt. With World War II looming, the producing base of the nation, particularly the metal generators, ramped up construction and that during flip created so much wanted jobs. Obviously, throughout the battle, many guys had been taken into the provider, giving them constant pay, and folks no longer within the navy as good as females went to paintings within the factories to aid the battle attempt. Following the battle, the European production infrastructure was once devastated and, whilst Europe wanted rebuilding, the US production base was once the one sport on the town. That is what gave upward push to the financial system of the Fifties. Due to usual marketplace forces, the rate of gasoline will cross down vastly by way of the tip of the 12 months and keep its decline into subsequent 12 months. Whoever is President gets credit score for that, although they relatively had not anything to do with it. Since the President's fame ranking is the direct inverse of the rate of gasoline (throughout the 1974 gasoline quandary, Nixon resigned, Carter grew to become a one time period President for that reason of the 1979 gasoline quandary, Reagan was once highly standard for that reason of the decreasing of gasoline expenses throughout his time period, Bush I was once a one time period President because of improved gasoline expenses and Clinton got credit score for an increasing financial system that was once already at the upswing while he was once elected and the rate of gasoline declined to underneath $a million.00/gallon), the President will probably be standard.
anonymous
2007-11-02 20:11:39 UTC
not yet.that comes next year.
anonymous
2007-11-02 03:52:52 UTC
GREED ! Always has been Always will be GREED!
Jonathan W
2007-11-02 02:04:35 UTC
No. We still have one of the biggest economies in the world despite what the media has to say. The media gets people worked up in a frenzy thinking doomsday is around the corner. China's economy is growing but is nowhere near ours. This country could not do the things it funds if the economy was not so large. Don't forget we are helping fuel their economy. I don't agree with that but it is what it is.
enigma
2007-11-02 01:30:31 UTC
Where I live the economy is not looking with a Lot of Job Cuts (mine included) and more to come,the value of the US Dollar against the Euro is falling fast.There's only one thing for the USA to do,and that is to join Canada and Mexico with the US into a new nation called "North American Union" with a single currency to compete against the European Union currency the Euro.

With these 3 nations joined together it's economy along with it's security will greatly improve.You will not need a passport to travel between these countries,this needs to be done as soon as possible,even a Blind Man can see that.
Carlos
2007-11-02 01:17:48 UTC
Yea, we getting owned. Economic declines are actually normal and are needed for the economy to continue growing. It's like a forest fire. Yea it burns up a lot of tree's but life comes back stronger with time.
anonymous
2007-11-02 01:13:09 UTC
exactly
anonymous
2007-11-02 01:16:32 UTC
hi

Peter Schiff is laughing at me. I’ve just asked him to entertain the following notion: that we dodged a bullet during August’s financial-market turmoil and, with the stock market bouncing right back from every dip, things might be okay. So why worry?



He stops laughing. “Why worry?” he asks. “Because we dodged a bullet but are about to step on a hand grenade.”



Sitting in a corner office of a nondescript building just off I-95 in Darien, Connecticut, Schiff, the president of brokerage Euro Pacific Capital, and author of Crash Proof: How to Profit From the Coming Economic Collapse, will spend the next hour spelling out a singularly pessimistic view of the American economy. And he will do so while exhibiting a curious juxtaposition unique to the bearish prognosticator: He speaks of disaster with a smile on his face. No, he’s not happy about our impending doom. But he is happy that people are finally taking him seriously.



Some people, anyway. The recessionary fears that were sparked by the global liquidity crisis in August have eased, largely because of a resilient stock market and a belief that the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate cut in September curtailed deeper losses. When Goldman Sachs invested in its own imploding Global Equity Opportunities hedge fund in August, calling it an “opportunity” and not a “rescue,” people laughed. Guess who laughed last? Goldman, which had reportedly enjoyed a $370 million gain on its $2 billion rescue by October. The optimists stay focused on stories like Steve Jobs’s next stroke of genius.



But Schiff, whom CNBC calls “Dr. Doom,” has not, as bears do when winter approaches, gone off to hide in a cave. Why not? Because every single one of the underlying economic factors that he has identified as cause for concern has worsened. And his is no longer a lone voice in the woods. If you don’t care to listen to a man nicknamed Dr. Doom, you can listen to people like former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, esteemed bond-fund manager Bill Gross, or famed money manager Jeremy Grantham. They’re part of a growing chorus of voices that are saying many of the same things as Schiff.



Their bearish arguments come in many shapes and sizes, but here’s the basic one: The past five or six years have been deceptively fortunate ones for the U.S. economy. That’s because any troublesome developments—the surge in oil prices from $28 per barrel in 2003 to about $87 today, for example—have been papered over by rising home prices. Home equity has been used to buy flat-screen TVs, SUVs, and more homes. Wall Street bought up all this debt from lenders, thereby allowing them to lend more.



The softening of real-estate prices in most parts of the United States put a crimp in this system, but it hasn’t stopped it. The question is, what, if anything, will? What will bring on the apocalypse that Schiff and others believe is inevitable? They see it like this:



THREAT NO. 1

The Bottom Continues to Fall Out of the Housing Market

Manhattan’s gravity-defying real estate aside, it’s quite clear the nation is experiencing a genuine housing crisis. In August, pending home sales dropped 6.5 percent, and they currently sit at their lowest level since 2001. The National Association of Realtors conducted a recent survey that showed more than 10 percent of sales contracts fell through at the last moment in August, primarily owing to disappearing loan commitments from banks. The crisis will only deepen, when more borrowers see their adjustable-rate mortgages adjusted upward. There was a foreclosure filing for one of every 510 households in the country in August, the highest figure ever issued, and by one estimate, more than 1.7 million foreclosures will occur in the country by the end of 2008. That’s not just subprime borrowers: According to the Federal Housing Finance Board, while nearly 35 percent of conventional mortgages in 2004 used ARMs, some 70.7 percent of jumbo loans—those above $333,700 (the jumbo threshold in 2004; it’s now higher)—did too.



Historically, bond-market investors have been the boring counterparts to their equity-market brethren. But in his October Investment Outlook, famed bond investor Bill Gross was anything but. The managing director of money management firm pimco pointed out that the Federal Reserve is caught in a bind: It must continue to lower interest rates to ameliorate this burgeoning housing crisis, but in doing so, it “risks reigniting speculative equity market behavior, and … a run on the dollar.” (More on the dollar later.) Gross doesn’t have the answers but observes that the Fed is “in a pickle, and a sour one at that.” Worse yet, concerns that a rate cut might be inflationary actually caused bond yields to rise in the wake of the rate cut, something that doesn’t normally happen. The Fed’s influence, always overstated, might turn out to be nonexistent in a credit market that remains on edge.



Hedge-fund veteran Rick Bookstaber, the author of A Demon of Our Own Design, spells out a potentially disastrous scenario that could unfold regardless of what the Fed does: Continued foreclosures result in a further drop in housing prices, which results in further foreclosures, which result in a further drop in housing prices. Even for those of us not selling, reduced home values result in a reduced sense of security, which results in reduced consumption, which results in a slowing economy, which … you get the point.

have a good day


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...