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View Full Version : Roubini: THE WORST IS YET TO COME...Closing the markets?




wgadget
10-26-2008, 08:24 PM
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/economics/article5014463.ece

Excerpt:

ctober 26, 2008
Nouriel Roubini: I fear the worst is yet to come
When this man predicted a global financial crisis more than a year ago, people laughed. Not any more...
Dominic Rushe

As stock markets headed off a cliff again last week, closely followed by currencies, and as meltdown threatened entire countries such as Hungary and Iceland, one voice was in demand above all others to steer us through the gloom: that of Dr Doom.

For years Dr Doom toiled in relative obscurity as a New York University economics professor under his alias, Nouriel Roubini. But after making a series of uncannily accurate predictions about the global meltdown, Roubini has become the prophet of his age, jetting around the world dispensing his advice and latest prognostications to politicians and businessmen desperate to know what happens next – and for any answer to the crisis.

While the economic sun was shining, most other economists scoffed at Roubini and his predictions of imminent disaster. They dismissed his warnings that the sub-prime mortgage disaster would trigger a financial meltdown. They could not quite believe his view that the US mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would collapse, and that the investment banks would be crushed as the world headed for a long recession.

Yet all these predictions and more came true. Few are laughing now.

tpreitzel
10-26-2008, 08:31 PM
We've got an enemy ship dropping depth charges on the Republic, sir. Dive, dive, and hold on to your butts, err wallets!

jave27
10-26-2008, 08:56 PM
It's funny that people who preach of doom and gloom are only considered to have a valid argument after everything goes to hell. If only the power elite would pay attention a little earlier...

raiha
10-26-2008, 10:48 PM
Why would they do that if they are manufacturing the goddamn thing?

free.alive
10-27-2008, 12:28 AM
I wouldn't get too wrapped in this cat...

He drops a quiet line about a worldwide solution. Such rhetoric doesn't typically mean worldwide deregulation and sound money.

Cap
10-27-2008, 08:48 AM
Why would they do that if they are manufacturing the goddamn thing?

Couldn't have said it better.

mczerone
10-27-2008, 09:00 AM
It's funny that people who preach of doom and gloom are only considered to have a valid argument after everything goes to hell. If only the power elite would pay attention a little earlier...

But then they would be ridiculed for "undermining confidence in the markets". We can't have people in power suggest that the system is broken - that might break the system!

We need to break the system. Or else hope that the next bailout is at least directed toward consumers, instead of failed banks that wont use it for liquidity anyway.

I propose giving $10k to each taxpayer, if any money is to be 'given'. Tell them that it would be a good idea to put $9k in savings, and use the last $1000 for consumables. Without increasing the real savings in the bank, we'll never have a chance to "stabilize" a market. We just have debtors trying to eat and escape bill collectors.

Of course, the real solution is to scrap centralized and fractional reserve banking, legalize competing currencies, and abolish all involuntary taxation. But then Bernanke wouldn't have a cushy job where he can fill his face and take staged pictures all day. He might actually have to try to find a productive form of work, instead of sit as a lackey to the Highwaymen that provide his safe harbor.