.Oh
Crud! 19 Reasons Why It Is Time To Start Freaking Out About The
Global Economy
Yes,
it is officially time to start freaking out about the global
economy. The European financial system is falling apart and it
is going to go down hard. If Europe was going to be saved it
would have happened by now. The big money insiders have already
pulled their funds from vulnerable positions and they are ready to
ride the coming chaos out. Over the next few months the slow
motion train wreck currently unfolding in Europe will continue to
play out and things will likely really start really heating up in the
fall once summer vacations are over. Most Americans greatly
underestimate how much Europe can affect the global economy.
Europe actually has a larger population than the United States does.
Europe also has a significantly larger economy and a much larger
banking system. The world is more interconnected today than
ever before, and a collapse of the financial system in Europe will
cause a massive global recession. Once the global economy
slides into another major recession, it is going to take years to
recover. The pain is going to be immense. Yes, that is
going to include the United States. Sadly, we never recovered
from the last recession, and it is frightening to think about how
much farther this next recession is going to knock us down.
The
big problem is that there is simply way, way, way too much debt in
the United States and Europe. It has been a lot of fun spending
all of this borrowed money, but now we get to pay the price.
The
following are 19 reasons why it is time to start freaking out about
the global economy....
#2 The
yield on 10 year Spanish bonds has now risen to
more than 7 percent.
This is considered to be an unsustainable level.
#3 Citigroup
Chief Economist Willem Buiter says that both
Italy and Spain are
going to need major bailouts.
#4 The
Spanish banking crisis continues to get worse. The following is
from a CNN article that
was posted on Monday....
But the depth of the nation's crisis has raised doubts about whether €100 billion will be enough to recapitalize the banks. For example, the Bank of Spain, the nation's central bank, released data Monday showing that "doubtful" loans -- those that are more than 3 months overdue -- rose to €152.7 billion in April, equal to 8.7% of all the loans held by the nation's banks.
#7 The
socialists won an outright
majority in
the recent parliamentary elections in France. That means that
France and Germany are now headed in completely different
directions. The close cooperation that we have seen between
France and Germany in recent years is now over.
#8 New
French President Francois Hollande has promised to implement a top
tax rate of
75 percent on
those making over 1 million euros a year.
#9 German
Chancellor Angela Merkel has declared that Germany will
not budge at all on
the terms of the Greek bailout.
#10 Analysts
at Citigroup Global Markets are projecting that the odds of Greece
leaving the euro over the next 12 to 18 months are still between
50 and 75 percent.
#11 Money
is being transferred from banks in southern Europe to banks in
northern Europe at
an astounding pace....
Financial advisers and private bankers whose clients have accounts too large to be covered by a Europe-wide guarantee on deposits up to 100,000 euros ($125,000), are reporting a "bank run by wire transfer" that has picked up during May.
Much of this money has headed north to banks in London, Frankfurt and Geneva, financial advisers say.
"It's been an ongoing process but it certainly picked up pace a couple of weeks ago We believe there is a continuous 2-3 year bank run by wire transfer," said Lorne Baring, managing director at B Capital, a Geneva-based pan European wealth management firm.
#12 As
I wrote about recently,
about 500
million euros a
day has been pulled out of Greek banks so far this month.
#13 The
Bank for International Settlements is warning that global lending is
contracting at the fastest rate that we have seen since
the end of the last financial crisis.
#14 Lloyd's
of London has
publicly admitted that
it is making preparations for a collapse of the eurozone.
#15 Government
debt levels all over the industrialized world have exploded in recent
years. The following is from a recent article by
Stephen Lendman....
Five years ago, OECD countries sovereign debt/GDP ratios were 70%. Today it’s 106% and rising.
Anything
over 100% is considered to be an extremely dangerous level.
#16 The
economic problems in Europe are already taking a toll on the U.S.
economy. At this point U.S. exports to Europe are
way down.
#17 One
recent poll found that 75 percent of Americans are either "very
or somewhat worried"
that the U.S. economy is heading for another recession.
#18 Under
Barack Obama, the United States has been indulging in a debt binge
unlike anything ever seen in U.S. history. The following is
from a recentForbes
article....
After just one year of the Obama spending binge, federal spending had already rocketed to 25.2% of GDP, the highest in American history except for World War II. That compares to 20.8% in 2008, and an average of 19.6% during Bush’s two terms. The average during President Clinton’s two terms was 19.8%, and during the 60-plus years from World War II until 2008 — 19.7%. Obama’s own fiscal 2013 budget released in February projects the average during the entire 4 years of the Obama Administration to come in at 24.4% in just a few months. That budget shows federal spending increasing from $2.983 trillion in 2008 to an all time record $3.796 trillion in 2012, an increase of 27.3%.
Moreover, before Obama there had never been a deficit anywhere near $1 trillion. The highest previously was $458 billion, or less than half a trillion, in 2008. The federal deficit for the last budget adopted by a Republican controlled Congress was $161 billion for fiscal year 2007. But the budget deficits for Obama’s four years were reported in Obama’s own 2013 budget as $1.413 trillion for 2009, $1.293 trillion for 2010, $1.3 trillion for 2011, and $1.327 trillion for 2012, four years in a row of deficits of $1.3 trillion or more, the highest in world history.
#19 Barack
Obama almost seems more focused on his golf game than on the problems
the global economy is having. He just finished up playing
his 100th
round of golf since
he became president.
If
you are looking for some kind of a global financial miracle you can
stop watching.
If
European leaders had a master plan to save Europe they would have
shown it by now.
The
entire house of cards is starting to come down and things are going
to get really messy.
A
lot of people both in the United States and in Europe are going to
lose their jobs and their homes over the next few years.
It
is likely that the next recession will be even more painful than the
last one was.
Now
is not the time to panic. If you acknowledge what is coming and
prepare accordingly then you will likely be in good shape.
But
if you stick your head in the sand and pretend that everything is
going to be okay then the next few years will likely be incredibly
painful for you.
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