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paramount.
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July 24, 2012 at 5:50 PM #20006July 25, 2012 at 11:55 AM #748904
Diego Mamani
Participant“But here’s the point I would make: In 1960 … we had $30 billion on the balance sheet of the Fed. It had taken 45 years to build that up. Then, as they began to rapidly expand the balance sheet of the Fed during the inflation of the ’70s and the ’80s, even then it took us until September 2008 – the Lehman collapse – to get to $900 billion. Had the balance sheet only grown at 3%, which is what the capacity of the economy to grow, I think, really is, it would have been $300 billion, so they were overshooting.
“($900 billion is three times where) we should have been by the Lehman crisis event. In the next seven weeks, this crazy lunatic who’s running the Fed increased the balance sheet of the Fed by $900 billion, in seven weeks. In other words, they expanded the balance sheet of the Fed as rapidly in seven weeks as it had occurred during the first 93 years of its existence. And that’s not all, as they say on late night TV: in the next six weeks they added another $900 billion. So in thirteen weeks they tripled the balance sheet of the Fed.”
July 26, 2012 at 2:26 PM #748968sdduuuude
ParticipantJust back from vacation and caught this just before it dropped off the active forum list.
I thought this was an awesome interview and explains my trepidation with the general economic situation and provides good reasons to not underestimate the long-term effects of macroeconomics on our local housing markets.
I have seen this guy talk before and believe he understands the political-economic climate in the US as well as anyone and does a great job of explaining it.
July 26, 2012 at 9:32 PM #749007paramount
Participant[quote=sdduuuude]Just back from vacation and caught this just before it dropped off the active forum list.
I thought this was an awesome interview and explains my trepidation with the general economic situation and provides good reasons to not underestimate the long-term effects of macroeconomics on our local housing markets.
I have seen this guy talk before and believe he understands the political-economic climate in the US as well as anyone and does a great job of explaining it.[/quote]
I agree, but I also think this guy (Stockman) is a globalist.
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