Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Another (Even More Dire) Look at the US' Finance Problem

If you think that the ObamaSpendulus budget proposal is going to cause problems, you might be forgetting something even more ominous.

In 2009, the US ran an unprecedented $1.5 trillion budget deficit, financing the shortfall by issuing Treasury bonds. The Fed happily obliged by soaking up this tsunami of paper, either directly, or indirectly through mortgage purchases.

This boosted its own balance sheet from $800 million to a mind boggling $2 trillion in the process, or about 14% of GDP. Were there any other takers of new government debt? China bought $100 billion, and another $200 billion went to a hodgepodge of assorted foreign central banks and sovereign funds, barely 20% of the total.

Back out the Fed as the buyer of last resort, and where are we?

...There are only two possible outcomes to the greatest financing gap in history. Interest rates have to soar to unimaginable levels to attract recalcitrant investors, or the plunge in spending sends us into a postponed Great Depression II.

Let me know which one it is, will you? I’ll be hiding out in my camouflaged underground bunker in the desert. And if you do come calling, be a peach and bring me some MRE’s, a five gallon bottle of water, and a case of 9 mm ammo, will you?

Eminently sensible requests.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

No, that's not right. I may more often times than not oppose Dad29's opinions, but when you make those asinine comments, you only give him MORE AMMO against the opposition. It's counter-productive.

Dad29 said...

See how easy it is to repair, Anony 1:03?

Anonymous said...

angry old faggot. your mother sucks cock in hell. oohhhhhhh.

Anonymous said...

daddy, are you the only one here allowed to call people faggots?

i bet one of your sons has known the intimate touch of a man.