Sunday Night Futures
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Weekend:
• Schedule for Week of November 24, 2024
Monday:
• At 8:30 AM ET, *Chicago Fed National Activity Index* for October. This is
a composite index of ...
5 hours ago
I live in the USA and I am concerned about the future. I created this blog to share my thoughts on the economy and anything else that might catch my attention.
15 comments:
Notice how close to 1 this gets now?
We have a self-sustaining economy. It is our government that is 1:1 our overspending problem.
Anonymous,
It is sort of a chicken and the egg problem though.
Let's say I buy a Chinese toaster for $20.
Let's say they now use that $20 to buy US debt.
There's the 1:1 ratio.
However, we are clearly part of the problem here. If we didn't offer them so much government debt then they might be forced to buy something we actually sell. If they did that then we wouldn't even have a trade deficit.
Just thoughts.
Sooner or later, something has to give.
mab,
It is all about giving. Yes.
He who wished to secure the good of others, has already secured his own. - Confucius
I wonder what he would have said about securing the *goods* of others, because man, we've really been nailing that one, lol. Sigh.
Stag,
The manner in which one adjusts for inflation when multiple variables are in play can definitely skew results. I was playing with some data today and ran into that very same problem.
mab,
I am down at least 20 IQ points today based on lack of sleep. That's not helping either.
A -0.45% rate on 5-year TIPS and the 30-year TIPS yield of 1.46% is stressing me out a bit.
If Bernanke was trying to stress me, it is working!
If he was trying instead to entice me into visiting this country's many malls, then his plan is not working though. I need more sleep in order to drive, lol. Sigh.
What was once the tin foil hat area, scrapping Bretton Woods 2, has now become a coversation piece in normal circles. How far we have come!
GYSC,
This could be a major problem. Anyone who has played golf casually knows just how terrifying those "Woods" can be, both the tools to hit the ball and the location of the ball once it lands, lol. ;)
You are too much! Luv it.
"Doing it this way means that over the long-term we seem to get about 95 cents worth of government debt to every one dollar in trade deficit. The ratio is nearly 1:1."
What about countries like Great Britain, Spain, Italy, etc., would their ratio also be close to 1 to 1, or does the US hold that distinction all by itself?
watchtower,
No idea. I suspect 1:1 is at least partly just coincidence, but who really knows for sure?
Further, what works in the long-term definitely didn't seem to work in the short-term.
When our imports slowed, up went our national debt in an attempt to counter it.
Who cares when you have the RESERVE CURRENCEY!
GYSC,
Reserve your currency today! Orders are filling up fast! Everything must go!
You'll need the cash to buy one of these!!
No its not a coincidence. Its due to sterilization policies in East Asia.
They only need to sterilize the amount of their trade surplus, and they do so by purchasing our debts.
Anonymous,
That's certainly why I wanted to create the charts, but in theory some of that sterilization money finds its way into things other than our government debt though (think mortgage backed securities, corporate bonds, and so on). It is just a subset of our debts. The 1:1 ratio may therefore at least partly be just a coincidence.
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