Fed To Auction Another $100bn To Banks

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Admiral Valdemar
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Fed To Auction Another $100bn To Banks

Post by Admiral Valdemar »

End Game
Yahoo! Finance wrote:Fed Offers $100 Billion More to Banks

Friday March 28, 4:42 pm ET
By Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer
Fed Offers $100 Billion More to Commercial Banks to Fight Credit Crisis


WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Federal Reserve announced Friday it will auction an additional $100 billion in April to cash-strapped banks as it continues to combat the effects of a credit crisis.

The central bank said it would make $50 billion available at each of two auctions, on April 7 and April 21.

Through the end of March, the Fed has provided $260 billion in short-term loans to commercial banks through the innovative auction process. It also has employed Depression-era provisions to provide money to investment banks.

All the moves have been designed to cope with a serious financial crisis that has roiled U.S. and global markets and caused the near-collapse of Bear Stearns Cos., the nation's fifth largest investment bank.

The Fed has been holding auctions every two weeks since December to provide short-term loans to commercial banks. It started with auctions of $20 billion, then pushed the level to $30 billion, and in early March raised the auction amount to $50 billion as the credit shortage grew more severe.

In announcing the move to $50 billion last month, the Fed said it would continue the auctions for at least the next six months, unless credit conditions show they are no longer needed.


The auctions are just one of a series of unorthodox steps the Fed has taken to battle the current crisis. The biggest of those moves was an announcement that it was allowing investment banks to borrow directly from the Fed. Previously, only commercial banks, which face tighter regulations, had that privilege.

The Fed also said it would make available $30 billion in financing to support the sale of troubled Bear Stearns to JP Morgan Chase & Co., hoping to prevent a bankruptcy that could have rocked Wall Street.

Private economists said the auctions were having a positive impact but that troubles still exist in many sectors of the credit markets because of multibillion-dollar losses many financial institutions have suffered as the result of soaring defaults on mortgage loans.

"The Fed has worked some positive magic," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. "At least the panic has subsided as the risk of another major failure has receded given that financial institutions now have access to a lot of cash through the various lending facilities the Fed has established."

The Fed's auctions have drawn criticism from some that the central bank, and ultimately U.S. taxpayers, could be financing a bailout for big Wall Street firms that had engaged in risky lending practices.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will face questions about the Fed's recent moves when he testifies on Wednesday before the congressional Joint Economic Committee.
Many see this as spiralling out of control. There is apparently a limit of $800bn in cash assets given out at any one time. If this rate continues, we could see the Fed giving out over a trillion dollars by the end of summer. Read that again. Now read it slower and let that sink in. That's a "t", yes.

There's a reason Germany is fearing a total economic collapse now. This hole cannot be plugged. Consumer confidence in the US is at lows not seen in three/four decades and major institutions like Bear Stearns are game for failing. Who is next?

The Game They Play
The Telegraph wrote: When the going gets tough, banks yelp for nanny

By Jeff Randall
Last Updated: 12:24am GMT 27/03/2008

Bank customer: "What's the difference between a recession and a depression?"

Bank manager: "In a recession, you lose your job. In a depression, I lose mine."


Remarkable, isn't it, just how quickly champions of laissez-faire solutions can become advocates for state intervention. All it takes is for their gravy-train to break down.

When freedom to play with barely any restrictions was making them rich beyond imagination, big-shot financiers applauded "light-touch" regulation. The looser the rules, the louder they cheered.

Now, however, as credit is crunched, losses mount and prospects for lucrative employment come under threat, many titans of unfettered enterprise are suddenly crying out for nanny.

Not for them the tough love of supply and demand. No, sir. These are desperate times, requiring generous measures of tender, loving care.

The essential plumbing of commerce, it is alleged, has become dysfunctional. Or, as Josef Ackerman, chief executive of Deutsche Bank, said: "I no longer believe in the market's self-healing power."

Why ever not? Nowhere on the tin does it say that markets will correct themselves without someone being hurt. Indeed, for markets to function properly, pain, somewhere along the chain, is inevitable.

Markets work because they create winners and losers, not jobs-for-life security. Financial Darwinism doesn't just underpin the survival of the fittest, it ensures the extinction of pea-brained dinosaurs.

Corporations with too much fat and insufficient speed end up in evolution's Room 101. This is often forgotten when the trees are full of fruit.

In his book, The Final Crash, Hugo Bouleau (the nom de plume of a City investment manager) predicts: "Reckless lending will come back to haunt many a greedy banker and catch up with those directors that set excessive sales targets, forcing bank employees to fund unsuitable projects, chase ever riskier clients and sell inappropriate investment products."

This process is already under way in London and New York. Had it occurred anywhere else, one could be sure that Wall Street and the City would be nodding their approval.

After all, job losses = cost reductions; company insolvencies = sector consolidation; falling prices = buying opportunities. Great value is often found on a rubbish tip.

"But hang on a minute," the bankers yelp, "it's happening in banking. Banking. That means us." Yes boys, I'm afraid it does.

A smack by the invisible hand of market forces no longer seems such a good idea, does it? Far more appealing is the soft touch of Other People's Money. Cue: chorus of calls for taxpayers' funds to rescue distressed lenders.

We are told by the banks that they are too important to be allowed to fail, that their operations are so inextricably linked with the real economy we would be plunged into a 1930s-type calamity if a big one went under.

Forget moral hazard, we are urged, it's in everyone's interest to bail them out.

Those who got us into this mess are demanding that we get them out of it. They put a gun to our heads, insisting that, without immediate action, everyone will feel their pain (funny, I don't recall feeling the joy of their jackpot bonuses). Catharsis for a few will lead to nemesis for many.

Central banks seem to agree, so the Federal Reserve fixes a deal at Bear Stearns. This is no Northern Rock, a haven for small savers, but one of Wall Street's most egregious examples of knock-em-down-drag-em-out investment banking.

At a time when so many Americans are losing their homes, it's hard to think of a company less deserving of state support.

Paul Krugman, professor of economics at Princeton University, forecasts: "As Bear goes, so will the rest of the financial system. And if history is any guide, the coming taxpayer-financed bail-out will end up costing a lot of money."

The banks have landed us in this bad place because, over many years, they learnt how to wriggle out of regulation. Special investment vehicles were created to park risk. Derivatives were invented that became the financial equivalent of Frankenstein's monster - they took on a life of their own. In short, there emerged a parallel system of Wild West behaviour.

The banks' cocktail of greed and irresponsibility will, I'm sure, produce a wave of fresh regulation to clamp down on recent excesses.

Many of the new strictures will be counter-productive - they always are - in the same way that Sarbanes-Oxley legislation, after Enron and WorldCom, drove public share offerings out of New York and into London.

Never mind. For hyper-ventilating politicians - those who can think of nothing better than sticking their fingers into the free-enterprise pie - the sub-prime mortgage mess has turned into a two-inch tap-in. It's an unmissable chance to justify far-reaching extensions of their activities.

Christopher Fildes, who graced these pages for many years, once warned that while bankers and investors are counting their losses, the next worst thing is "the spectacle of finance ministers... and their supporting cast of bag carriers and sherpas hurrying to meet each other and to think of something that they or their spokesmen can subsequently announce. They are tempted at such times to take initiatives".

One dreads to think.
Testing The Limits?
FT.com wrote:Jump in rice price fuels fears of unrest

By Javier Blas in London and Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok

Published: March 27 2008 18:30 | Last updated: March 28 2008 09:06


ice prices jumped 30 per cent to an all-time high on Thursday, raising fears of fresh outbreaks of social unrest across Asia where the grain is a staple food for more than 2.5bn people.

The increase came after Egypt, a leading exporter, imposed a formal ban on selling rice abroad to keep local prices down, and the Philippines announced plans for a major purchase of the grain in the international market to boost supplies. Global rice stocks are at their lowest since 1976.

On Friday the Indian government imposed further restrictions on the exports of rice to combat rising local inflation, with traders warning that the new regime would de facto stop all India’s non-basmati rice sales.

The measures include raising the minimum price for selling abroad non-basmati rice by 53 per cent to $1,000 a tonne. Exports of premium basmati rice are likely to continue, although volumes could also suffer as the government also increased the minimum export price and scrapped export tax incentives.

While prices of wheat, corn and other agricultural commodities have surged since late 2006, the increase in rice prices only started in January.

The Egyptian export ban formalises a previously poorly enforced curb and follows similar restrictions imposed by Vietnam and India, the world’s second- and third-largest exporters. Cambodia, a small seller, also on Thursday announced an export ban.

These foreign sales restrictions have removed about a third of the rice traded in the international market.

“I have no idea how importing countries will get rice,” said Chookiat Ophaswongse, president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association. He forecast that prices would rise further.

The Philippines, the world’s largest buyer of the grain, said on Thursday it wanted to purchase 500,000 tonnes after it failed to buy a similar amount earlier this month. It is struggling to import 1.8m-2.1m tonnes to cover a production shortfall and on Thursday confirmed it would tap emergency stocks maintained by Vietnam and Thailand.

Rice is also a staple in Africa, particularly for small countries such as Cameroon, Burkina Faso and Senegal that have already suffered social unrest because of high food prices.

Thai rice, a global benchmark, was quoted on Thursday at $760 a tonne, up about 30 per cent from the previous daily quote of about $580 a tonne, according to Reuters data. Some traders, however, said the daily jump was not as steep, adding that Thai rice had already traded at about $700 a tonne this week.

Rice prices have doubled since January, when the grain traded at about $380 a tonne, boosted by strong Asian, Middle Eastern and African demand.

Additional reporting by Roel Landingin in Manila

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
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Post by J »

Don't forget this one.
Aggregate Reserves of Depository Institutions and the Monetary Base

Code: Select all

 FEDERAL RESERVE STATISTICAL RELEASE
  
 H.3 (502)
 Table 1                                                                                                
                                                                                        
 AGGREGATE RESERVES OF DEPOSITORY INSTITUTIONS AND THE MONETARY BASE
 Adjusted for changes in reserve requirements(1)                                        
 Seasonally adjusted unless noted otherwise
 Millions of dollars
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
                         Reserves of depository institutions                            
                                                                                          
                      ------------------------------------------                Term     
      Date              Total      Non-      Required   Excess,     Monetary   auction   
                         (2)     borrowed                 NSA         base     credit,     
                                   (3)                    (4)         (5)        NSA     
                                                                                                
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Month(6)
  2007-Feb.               42454      42424      40956       1498      813448                 
       Mar.               42321      42267      40686       1635      814991 
                                                                                           
       Apr.               42715      42635      41189       1525      817205  
       May                43197      43093      41760       1436      818799  
       June               43606      43419      41904       1702      820085   
                                                                                         
       July               41915      41653      40251       1664      821476 
       Aug.               44922      43948      40100       4822      824512   
       Sep.               42540      40973      40798       1742      821732   
                                                                                       
       Oct.               42507      42252      41056       1450      824713   
       Nov.               42646      42281      40970       1676      825653           
       Dec.               42585      27154      40839       1746      823386      11613
                                                                                       
  2008-Jan.               41780      -3879      40146       1634      821174      44516
       Feb.               42566     -17591      40857       1709      822461      60000
 2 weeks ending(7)	  		 		   			 	
  2008-Jan. 30            41630      -8760      40186       1444      821076      50000
                                                                                       
       Feb. 13            42092     -18010      40433       1658      822294      60000
            27            42936     -17262      41137       1799      822423      60000 
                                                                                       
       Mar. 12            43057     -17174      41654       1403      823819      60000
            26p           44477     -61788      39856       4621      829648      80000


Note that non-borrowed reserves are now negative by a greater amount than the total and required reserves. The banks are buried in the hole, they're all flat broke and the Federal Reserve Bank is the last and only lendor. This is why I've slapped put options on quite a few US banks.
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Post by KlavoHunter »

If there's a depression coming and we can't stop it, can we just throw ourselves into it headfirst and get it over with and work through it? I'd like for this to be over sooner rather than later, so maybe I can have a world worth having and raising kids in when it's over.
"The 4th Earl of Hereford led the fight on the bridge, but he and his men were caught in the arrow fire. Then one of de Harclay's pikemen, concealed beneath the bridge, thrust upwards between the planks and skewered the Earl of Hereford through the anus, twisting the head of the iron pike into his intestines. His dying screams turned the advance into a panic."'

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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

KlavoHunter wrote:If there's a depression coming and we can't stop it, can we just throw ourselves into it headfirst and get it over with and work through it? I'd like for this to be over sooner rather than later, so maybe I can have a world worth having and raising kids in when it's over.
No. Because the powers that be have it in their minds that they can defy economic laws and put off even a recession indefinitely, hence this amazing concerted effort to help those who shouldn't be helped.

Those of the Austrian school of thinking would accept the inevitable bust after a nice long boom, which we have had. Today, we want the highs without the lows and the catharsis of a recession is a natural cycle, like die-off in nature. In other words, when you're in a hole, you don't continue digging. And you most assuredly don't redouble your efforts when you hit the water table.
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Post by J »

KlavoHunter wrote:If there's a depression coming and we can't stop it, can we just throw ourselves into it headfirst and get it over with and work through it?
Politics aside, yes, we can certainly do that and we should, in fact I'd say we must. This will of course result in quite a few financial institutions going belly up overnight and lots of heads rolling along with many trillions going "poof".

However there's way too many brib..err...strategic campaign contributions and kickbacks in place for that to ever happen. The establishment will continue throwing money at the insolvable problem and then sic the taxpayers with all the costs and a broken nation while the powers that be make off with their hundred million dollar paycheques.
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Post by KlavoHunter »

Admiral Valdemar wrote:<snip>
J wrote:<snip>
The stupidity and greed of some people are so disheartening that I just want to put my face in my hands and cry. Their attempts to prolong the good times for a few months more will make the ensuing depression worse and more devastating to the man on the street.
"The 4th Earl of Hereford led the fight on the bridge, but he and his men were caught in the arrow fire. Then one of de Harclay's pikemen, concealed beneath the bridge, thrust upwards between the planks and skewered the Earl of Hereford through the anus, twisting the head of the iron pike into his intestines. His dying screams turned the advance into a panic."'

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Post by J »

I'd say the worst part is that none of the bad news is ever reported on mainstream media outlets, and when anything "bad" is reported it's given a spin that Baghdad Bob would be hard pressed to improved upon. No one has the guts to say "we are in deep, deep shit".
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

J wrote:I'd say the worst part is that none of the bad news is ever reported on mainstream media outlets, and when anything "bad" is reported it's given a spin that Baghdad Bob would be hard pressed to improved upon. No one has the guts to say "we are in deep, deep shit".
CNBC and Bloomberg are massive players in this charade. In fact, even the Beeb, Reuters, NY Post and others reported the housing prices rise this past week as a good thing, despite it being a month-to-month figure. Not year-over-year.

To put it simply, I can't trust what the media puts out any more, other than the odd editorial or rare reporting of the facts with some easily dismissed spin as above. You really do need to read between the lines now, because as far as the MSM is concerned, we've gone from "END OF TEH WORLD!!1!" to "Everything is fine, things are getting rosy again" in the space of a month. Some still debate if a recession is possible (LOL!) and others predict house prices rising to record highs again and the credit crisis a thing of the past.
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Post by J »

That's why I get my financial news & analysis from Stoneleigh and Ilargi's Automatic Earth Blog along with Karl Denninger's Tickerforum. Reading and understanding their material is quite liberating and enlightening.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Me too, though with the added benefit of Mish and The Daily Reckoning. Usually, if they've not go information on things totally absent from the mainstream media, they'll have MSM stories with added commentary to dissect what's going on. Very few in the press like setting off alarms when their interests are at stake (I believe NBC are owned by Disney, for instance, and less leisure spending would hurt them) which is why you'll only ever see editorials that close in on the bigger picture, not banner headline stories.

Course, not everyone can be correct all the time. I just find it helps if your news services are not owned by third parties with biases, still, even Reuters falls for government/corporate spin and that's an indie group, supposedly.
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Post by J »

Aaaiiiii!!! Valdy's stalking me around on the internet! :P
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Post by PainRack »

what a mess.... And my mom wants to purchase a new flat as an investment.......

While we do have the savings to do it, I'm just leary of any potential finanicial crisis in the family such as a major operation and the like which would require drawing on cash and I'm simply not confident enough in the news of a depression that we should sink in money. Of course, my brother is countering it with the needs analysis as well as long term benefits. And I secretly believes he thinks that buying during a potential recession is a good deal as interest wanes and its a good location.
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Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

Question: I know it's also happening in Europe now, but is there a detailed tally how much the European banks are throwing money at the problem?
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Post by cosmicalstorm »

I didn't realize that the Medicare program was such a big problem, or is this guy full of shit?
By Glenn Beck
CNN

Editor's note: "Glenn Beck" is on Headline News nightly at 7 and 9 p.m. ET.

NEW YORK (CNN) -- Let's say a giant asteroid was headed toward Earth right now and experts say it has a good chance of ending civilization as we know it. Let's also say that we've known about this asteroid for years but even as it gets closer and closer our leaders do nothing.

"Don't worry," they tell us, "The next administration will figure something out."

With the future of our country at stake, would Americans really sit back and tolerate that kind of inaction? Of course not -- we'd be sharpening our pitchforks and demanding answers.

Well there may not be a space asteroid heading toward us, but there is an economic one -- and the threat to our future is just as severe.

You might think that I'm talking about the recession (sorry: potential recession) or credit crisis, but I'm thinking bigger. Much, much bigger.

Let me give you three numbers that will put this economic asteroid into perspective: $200 billion, $14.1 trillion, and $53 trillion.

* $200 billion is the approximate total amount of write-downs announced so far as a result of the current credit crisis.

* $14.1 trillion is the size of the entire U.S. economy

* And $53 trillion is (drum roll please) the approximate size of this country's bill for the Social Security and Medicare promises we've made.

While no one will ever mistake me for Alan Greenspan, it seems to me that the third number is quite a bit larger than the other two. It also seems very few people care.

According to the latest Social Security and Medicare Trustees report (and I use that term loosely since it has the word "trust" in it) released earlier this week, the economic asteroid will first make impact in the year 2019 when the Medicaid trust fund becomes insolvent.

Only an immediate 122 percent increase in Medicare taxes and a 26 percent increase in Social Security taxes can prevent (or more likely, delay) its impact.

Realizing that Americans have become pretty much numb to these kinds of ridiculous sounding proposals, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson tried to up the ante this week. "Without change," he said, "Rising costs will drive government spending to unprecedented levels, consume nearly all projected federal revenues, and threaten America's future prosperity."

Now, I know we're all worried about important sounding things that none of us understand, like CDO's, SIV's, and Credit Default Swaps, but did you hear what our Treasury Secretary just said?

"Rising costs will ... consume nearly all projected federal revenues ..."

Translation: Every single tax dollar that is sent to Washington will be used to pay for just these two programs.

That means no money is left for anything else. Nothing. No Department of Defense or Homeland Security, no Department of Energy, no Department of Justice, no Environmental Protection Agency, no Internal Revenue Service. Actually, knowing our government, they'd probably keep the IRS going somehow.

Of course, none of this is exactly breaking news. Our leaders have known about this rapidly approaching asteroid for years now and they've done nothing but debate it. At the same time, I'm a realist. I understand that this stuff is "the third rail of politics," but our leaders' negligence on this issue is damn near criminal. No, correction, it is criminal.

Americans aren't afraid of the truth. In fact, we crave the truth only slightly more than we crave a leader who will actually give it to us. But part of the problem with this issue is that numbers followed by 12 zeroes aren't very relatable to the average American. Instead, try this on for size.

A million seconds is 12 days. A billion seconds is 32 years. A trillion seconds is 32,000 years. And 53 trillion seconds? 1.7 million years.

In an article that will appear in an upcoming issue of my magazine, Fusion, former Comptroller General of the United States David Walker tries a different tactic. He writes that our unfunded promises translate into "an IOU of around $455,000 per American household."

Wow. Does the size of our debt hit home now?

The America that I know doesn't sit around waiting for someone to rescue it from disaster. Besides, who do we expect to swoop in and save the day? Congress? The president? Please -- they're not only the ones who put the asteroid into space, they've also been making it bigger with irresponsible spending on everything from prescription drugs to billions in rebate checks and bailouts.

Bruce Willis and Tommy Lee Jones? They're more likely to be on Social Security than to save it.

And that leaves only us: We the People. Like every other crisis we face, it's up to us to save ourselves.

But how?

Be honest, no matter what side of the political aisle you're on, it's obvious that our financial deficit is dwarfed only by the deficit of trust we have in our leaders.

I'm willing to do the right thing for our future, I'm willing to sacrifice, but not when I believe that our leaders will do nothing but make the asteroid even larger.
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Post by Keevan_Colton »

Yep, then again the per capita government spending on healthcare in the US through medicaid is higher than the per capita spending of any country with a comprehensive national health care system...and that excludes the entire private insurance industry from the sums.

A lot could be saved just by killing off the bullshit. Technically speaking it ought to be possible to about half that without any actual loss of service by simply removing parasitic corporate entities leeching profit from human suffering...but that ain't the American way.
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Post by Starglider »

What would happen if the government just stops paying out social security? Probably semi-randomly, i.e. only 50% of the people expecting benefits each month actually get them? I'm sure it would be a humanitarian disaster but would that actually affect the economy noticeably?
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Post by Keevan_Colton »

Starglider wrote:What would happen if the government just stops paying out social security? Probably semi-randomly, i.e. only 50% of the people expecting benefits each month actually get them? I'm sure it would be a humanitarian disaster but would that actually affect the economy noticeably?
Well, since they seem to think that giving people more money is good for the economy, surely taking it away must be bad? After all, they cant pay people for food and shelter then which means people higher up the economic food chain end up with problems...trickle down might now work, but fucking up is just fine...
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Post by Aaron »

Starglider wrote:What would happen if the government just stops paying out social security? Probably semi-randomly, i.e. only 50% of the people expecting benefits each month actually get them? I'm sure it would be a humanitarian disaster but would that actually affect the economy noticeably?
If the administration enjoys revolution it would be a good move, that said I wasn't aware the US even had a welfare program.
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Post by Starglider »

Cpl Kendall wrote:If the administration enjoys revolution it would be a good move, that said I wasn't aware the US even had a welfare program.
For the (large) part of social security that's acting like a state pension, are the recipients actually willing and capable to engage in any sort of violent revolution? Or are you expecting everyone else to revolt because it just became patently obvious that they're paying in without any concrete expectation of getting anything back?
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Post by Aaron »

Starglider wrote:
For the (large) part of social security that's acting like a state pension, are the recipients actually willing and capable to engage in any sort of violent revolution? Or are you expecting everyone else to revolt because it just became patently obvious that they're paying in without any concrete expectation of getting anything back?
Pensions count as social security? Disregard my last then.
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Post by Starglider »

Cpl Kendall wrote:Pensions count as social security? Disregard my last then.
'Retirement Insurance Benefits' seem to be the US equivalent of what most European countries would call a state pension. This was the original social security benefit, and indeed, the 1935 act that created social security was also called the 'Old Age Pension Act'. Over the years other programs were added, i.e. Federal unemployment benefits, disability benefits (medical via medicaid and direct cash via SSI), general medical benefits (medicare), child benefits (direct cash and medical),

In every care the US version looks like a fucked-up, obfuscated version of the European equivalent hamstrung by bickering between state and federal government and arcane means-testing rules (with massive overhead).
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Post by RedImperator »

Starglider wrote:
Cpl Kendall wrote:If the administration enjoys revolution it would be a good move, that said I wasn't aware the US even had a welfare program.
For the (large) part of social security that's acting like a state pension, are the recipients actually willing and capable to engage in any sort of violent revolution? Or are you expecting everyone else to revolt because it just became patently obvious that they're paying in without any concrete expectation of getting anything back?
It wouldn't need to be violent. The very large percentage of the electorate that either directly benefits from Social Security or indirectly benefits (with, say, a parent's social security check helping cover long-term care expenses a child would otherwise be paying) would vote everyone involved out of office. If it even takes that long. If a president arbitrarily decided to stop paying Social Security, I wouldn't be surprised to see him impeached by his own party.
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Post by Darth Wong »

cosmicalstorm wrote:I didn't realize that the Medicare program was such a big problem, or is this guy full of shit?
He's full of shit. He's assuming that you can slap a derivative on a trend and then extrapolate it linearly to infinity, assuming no other mechanisms whatsoever or any possibility of change in future.

In short, it's like saying that you have to turn your car sharply to the right now, because if you continue at this velocity, you will crash into that building 5 miles down the road. It might be a valid argument if the car were like the Titanic and very slow to maneuver, but with financial benefit programs that could be changed in a year, it just doesn't add up.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

On the other hand, Beck does illustrate how poorly managed the whole system is, even if his other assessments are incorrect. The US has a widening and accelerating trade deficit, many banking institutions are going down the crapper and are only functioning today because of the Fed and the US is so far in the red as to be a historical first.

Whatever your views on trying to counter this problem, the scale is beyond most peoples' comprehension and no one seems to want to treat the disease, rather, just the symptoms (which we're seeing have temporary reprieve at best; exacerbate the whole thing at worst).
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Post by Darth Wong »

Admiral Valdemar wrote:On the other hand, Beck does illustrate how poorly managed the whole system is, even if his other assessments are incorrect. The US has a widening and accelerating trade deficit, many banking institutions are going down the crapper and are only functioning today because of the Fed and the US is so far in the red as to be a historical first.

Whatever your views on trying to counter this problem, the scale is beyond most peoples' comprehension and no one seems to want to treat the disease, rather, just the symptoms (which we're seeing have temporary reprieve at best; exacerbate the whole thing at worst).
The funny thing is that Beck isn't even talking about the banking collapse. He's talking about social benefit programs like Medicaid and Social Security. In other words, it's just a repeat of the bog-standard conservative refrain of the last ten years: "gut benefit programs today, so we won't have to in the future!"
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"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing

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"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.

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