US Economy Beset By Problems

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First Posted: 03-15-08 10:02 AM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 05:12 AM

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From the fallout over the subprime disaster to the credit crisis to rising gas prices to unease on Wall Street, the US economy looks increasingly shaky and possibly on the brink of a recession.

Bear Stearns Bailout: On Friday the Federal Reserve, looking to head off a financial crisis, implemented a dramatic rescue of faltering Wall St. giant Bear Stearns. The Washington Post reports:

The Federal Reserve took the extraordinary step yesterday of providing emergency funding to one of Wall Street's venerable firms, Bear Stearns, after it ran out of cash to repay its lenders.

The Fed used a little-known power it last exercised in the 1960s to stem a run on Bear Stearns that could have sent multibillion-dollar losses cascading across the world financial system, causing more failures on Wall Street and threatening to choke off global economic growth.[...]

Critics characterized the Fed's move as a bailout that inappropriately intrudes on the free market and could lead banks to keep taking risks like those that imperiled Bear Stearns. Other analysts said the action was necessary, given the precarious state of world financial markets.

"We're on a knife's edge," said Eugene White, an economics professor at Rutgers University who studies financial crises. "The danger is if people's confidence is lost in a place like Bear Stearns, no one will lend to anybody."

Market Stumbles: The Bear Stearns bailout failed to stabilize Wall St., with the market tumbling Friday, the AP notes:

Wall Street plunged anew Friday after a near meltdown at Bear Stearns Cos. handed investors the unwelcome confirmation that the credit market's troubles are far from over. Word that the investment bank needed rescuing touched off a wave of selling that left each of the major indexes down more than 1.5 percent on the day; the Dow Jones industrial average fell nearly 200 points.

More Interest Rate Cuts Expected: The AP reports that Tuesday could see further action from the Federal Reserve:

Desperate to aid an economy in crisis, the Federal Reserve is ready to deliver yet another big interest rate cut.

How big? One-half of a percentage point, some economists say. Investors and others hope for even more, a three-quarters cut or perhaps a full point, given the turmoil on Wall Street. It will be a close call, Fed watchers say.

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Gold Prices: On Thursday gold prices passed the $1,000 mark.

The metal peaked at $1,005 a troy ounce before noon. It fell back by day's end, with the June contract settling at $998.70, its highest nominal close, but below its inflation-adjusted peak, reached in the early 1980s after a series of wars, oil shocks and a deep domestic recession.

Gas, Diesel Prices Reach Record High: From the AP:

At the pump, gas prices set records for the fourth straight day, rising 1.3 cents Friday to a national average price of $3.28 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. Average prices are nearing $4 in some parts of Hawaii.

Diesel, meanwhile, rose 2.9 cents to a new record national average of $3.938 a gallon. Heating oil, a fellow distillate and close cousin of diesel, jumped to new records on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Grocery Inflation: The New York Times reports that the price of food is surging:

Government figures released Friday showed that grocery costs had jumped 5.1 percent in 12 months, the latest in a string of increases. In fact, the nation is undergoing its worst grocery inflation since the early 1990s.

With a few exceptions, nearly every grocery category measured by the Labor Department, which compiles the official inflation numbers, has increased in the last year. Milk is up 17 percent, as are dried beans, peas and lentils. Cheese is up 15 percent, rice and pasta 13 percent, and bread 12 percent.

No food product has gone up as much as eggs, jumping 25 percent since February 2007 and 62 percent in the last two years.

From the fallout over the subprime disaster to the credit crisis to rising gas prices to unease on Wall Street, the US economy looks increasingly shaky and possibly on the brink of a recession. Bear...
From the fallout over the subprime disaster to the credit crisis to rising gas prices to unease on Wall Street, the US economy looks increasingly shaky and possibly on the brink of a recession. Bear...
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When do we actually acknowledge we are in a recesssion? if not worse...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:00 PM on 03/15/2008

I think everyone is too depressed about this economy to post. Or perhaps the ultra-rich have finally achieved their goal of making everyone else work so hard to keep up that no one has time to post anymore. I guess trickle down was aptly named--the only wealth that gets to the rest of us is a trickle.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 03/15/2008

One thing you won't hear in the news media is the reason for all this. At the end of the day this was a FAILURE TO REGULATE. Is there any doubt why? Republicans don't believe in regulation. They sure do seem to like corruption and financial disasters, though. Is there any doubt gangsters don't want anyone looking over their shoulders why they commit crimes?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 PM on 03/15/2008
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I've been waiting for this economy to tank for the past 4 years or so. Bush cut taxes when he took us to war. All my friends and neighbors are working 2 jobs each to stay above water.

Since gas and food were taken out of the inflation rate, nobody seems to realize that our food prices have doubled over the past 2 years. I know a lot of that is due to rising gas prices and with diesel being 50 cents higher than regular gas, it's just made matters worse. Last fall I paid $0.99 for an item and yesterday the same item was $1.67

This President hasn't even noticed that people were working 2 jobs at less pay, didn't care that many had given up on even looking for work outside the home, took credit for the housing boom 4 years ago that anyone with a brain knew would go south faster than melted butter and now blames the housing industry for the recession.­..definite­ly not the lending institutions who took advantage of the system or those who bought homes never intending to live in them, just walked away. Oh, yeah, there's the health care system, which really has gotten totally out of hand. This is another area that those of us who were insured before the HMO's of the world existed, knew we'd be in this situation one day.

In many European countries, citizens pay 50% taxes on their income. Sounds outrageous, doesn't it? Well, they have free education through college (how much do you pay for your kidnergarten student to go to school?) There is free medical coverage from birth to grave. They pay less than half what we do for medication that comes from this country. Why?? Because those "old European" countries were smart enough to make deals with the pharmecuticals when buying in massive quantities. We can pay up to 5000x what it costs to make a medication. How much would you save if you didn't have to pay for medical coverage? I know it used to cost me a week's salary.

We are driving ourselves to early graves with all this stuff. Nobody really has time off to relax. The rest of the world laughs at us and we think we're the greatest thing since sliced bread.

Our companies have moved overseas and blame countries like China for sending back leaded painted toys...whe­re were OUR management people who were supposed to be looking after their tax free companies? Many European countries are now considering out sourcing their plant facilities to the US because it's cheaper to do business over here. How's that for a turn-around?

Like Grandma said...wha­t goes around comes around.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:38 PM on 03/15/2008

And I see our idiot an chief doing a tap dance in front of the white house!!!!
Showing his pain for the American people I suppose!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 PM on 03/15/2008
- larry278 I'm a Fan of larry278 48 fans permalink

Some of us are busy picking up bottles & scrap to get the price of a liter or so of cheap, fortified wine to make a GW Bush drink of business on the rocks & stay drunk till we go back to selling apples on Monday. If you drink a lot of cheap fortified wine that's 20% or more of alcohol you risk falling into a stupor, fouling yourself & sleeping it off outside. If you pass out on the sidewalk you can end up being taken to the drunk tank by the cops. That means talking to the judge on Monday. It's damned hard to get the price of a gallon jug of white port before the store closes. Some of us don't worry about being offed by troll hunting kids or getting our clothes stolen or finding a place out of the wind & rain to sleep it off. And you expect us to comment. Most libraries are closed by now so we can't use their computers. We hocked our computers & other stuff a week or two after the subprime bubble broke when we got fired by the hedge fund. Maybe somebody who still works at Bear Stearns will let us use their lap tops & give us the price of a big jug of white port too. We'll write comments to HP then.
Drunken bums don't have the leisure time to surf the web. Surviving if you've been laid off & foreclosed is about as difficult as being a wino or a junkie. We don't have free time anymore. It's rough & it's getting worse.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 03/15/2008

"Oh Woe is me...woe is me...Isn't there some painless non-bitter pill that we can somehow take that will somehow spread the costs of our greed across the backs of those who in the last 20 years barely kept up with inflations so that nobody will have to give up their jets and expensive homes and ...oh, darn those poor people, getting sick and costing more than we can charge their insurance.­..ratz on those hungry people always wanting to eat stuff. Why can't this be just as easy to fix as it was to cause? It just doesn't make sense and...it's not fair...non­e of the workin' poor have to give up jets and yachts and stuff like that...it'­s just so unfair to the wealthy especially since they are the ones that have to create all the jobs and stuff..whe­re would the working poor be with out their jobs that we try to provide and the less we pay the more we can hire...don­'t they see? Those ingrates oh, I know, let's throw a tax deductible charity rock concert!..­."
Overheard in a Men's Room in Minneapolis Airport and all around the country where political strategies are being laid out in concert with the media.
So far not solution is in sight.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:07 PM on 03/15/2008

Bail them out so they can repeat it. Free Market my ass. Only when the greed and avarice is at the top is help offered. They aren't doing jack sh*t for those losing their homes forom this condition THEY created. How bogus is that? And throwing chump change at the rest of us as a smoke screen.Rig­ht after they are let off the hook, they will be buying more yachts and G5s. They should be in the docket for creating this mess. They gambled and lost. Are they making all those that lose in Las Vegas whole? One thing for sure they should be banned from being able to do this ever again. What is different from the guy that loses the banks money from bad investments with embezzeled money? This is cronyism at its worst. Let the bastards suffer. If they are drowning, throw them an anchor! Allan Greenspan shares in this mess.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 PM on 03/15/2008
- gonnuts I'm a Fan of gonnuts 15 fans permalink

Get ready folks the implosion is here. By this time next year we'll be so deep into a depression that all the current problems you have now will seem trite.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 03/15/2008
- Harrier I'm a Fan of Harrier 10 fans permalink

I believe this economy is in a far worse situation than earlier when his President originally took office. i say this because I doen't see anything the fed does an all the tools it has seems to be to little too late. This needs to years to shake out

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 03/15/2008

This is most definetely a REPUBLICON led recession. Their needless war in Iraq has cost and will cost needless generations of Americans (if such a country exists in 100 years) trillions in taxes. Many promised programs will have to be cut, gutted, scrapped. But again, maybe a meltdown is what this country needs. Maybe this country does need a 'do over'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 03/15/2008
- Citizen54 I'm a Fan of Citizen54 16 fans permalink

Let's elect McCain and ensure 4 more years of this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 PM on 03/15/2008
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We're *in* a recession.

Leland R. Erickson

Citizen

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:39 PM on 03/15/2008
- NoOtherWay I'm a Fan of NoOtherWay 3 fans permalink
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Conservatives:

Please explain the benefits of a completely unregulated free market to me please.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:37 PM on 03/15/2008
- vippy I'm a Fan of vippy 67 fans permalink

This goes to show us how the politicians lie to us. A couple of weeks ago Bush denied we are in a
recession so did FOX NEWS. Now they have to bail out the banks and they keep lowering the interest
rate though they know that it won't make a bit of difference to the masses. No one addresses the problem with the gas prices which suck the very life out of this economy but they blame it on the
foreclosure rate. I am not affected by that at all and in fact I do not know anyone who is foreclosing.
So how can that be a problem. I do, however, see a huge problem every time I gas up or have to
buy groceries. $ 100 buys you nothing anymore, it is the old $ 20 bill from a couple of years ago.
Thanks GOP for this wonderful economy. Those greedy politicians, who give tax breaks and shelters
to the corporation, e.g. oil industries and ethanol production, need to be fired for only they make money from those corporation via Hedge Funds, which requires a start up capital of $ 1 million to join.
Politicians work for their own pockets, obviously not for us. Kucinich wanted to change all that but
Joe Average had no clue and so we are stuck with more of the same!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 03/15/2008
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