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dixiegrrrrl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-22-10 09:11 PM
Original message
5 banks bit the dust today.
Columbia River Bank The Dalles OR
Evergreen Bank Seattle WA
Charter Bank Santa Fe NM
Bank of Leeton Leeton MO
Premier American Bank Miami


Total for this year: 9
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wuvuj Donating Member (874 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 08:58 AM
Response to Original message
1. The Hard Road Ahead ....

http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/pdf/mwo012210.pdf

Research and the Deflation Risk

We glean five important factors from this work that pertain to our present situation. First, financial imbalances occur when aggregate domestic debt is excessive relative to income, regardless of whether the government or private sector is accumulating the debt. Once debt becomes excessive, countries do not grow their way out of the problem; they must go through the time consuming and often painful processes of debt repayment and increased saving.

Second, whether the domestic debt is externally or internally owed is not as critical as the excessiveness of the debt.

Third, government actions, even involving sizeable sums of money, are far less helpful than they appear. As the book states, "Infusions of cash can make a government look like it is providing greater growth to its economy than it really is."

Fourth, Reinhart and Rogoff cover countries in debt crisis with a host of different conditions, such as growth and age of population, political regimes, technology status, education, and other idiosyncratic features. Nevertheless, economic damage as a result of extreme over-leverage has remarkably similar results, whether the barometer of performance is economic output, the labor markets, or asset prices.

Fifth, further increasing leverage to solve the problem only leads to greater systemic risk and general economic underperformance.

The real question for financial participants is whether all these influences result in inflation or deflation, and the authors' research details both outcomes. As is widely feared here in the U.S., they outline that many countries have had the right circumstances and mechanisms to inflate away their debt overhang, and, in fact, have done so by debasing their currency. Those particular circumstances are not currently present in the United States.

According to Reinhart and Rogoff the norm is that major economic contractions lead to deflation. Importantly, they call our present economic circumstances the "second great contraction."
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dixiegrrrrl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-23-10 09:11 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Thanks for the above info.
Everyone but Bernanke and Geithner seem to understand you cannot spend your way out of debt.

The inflation will come when Bernanke has to raise interest rates to make Treasuries an attracitve buy.
Unofficial inflation is always with us, in food and energy prices, but the government does not count those 2 costs in its inflation index, so it can continue to lie about reality.
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