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Hyper Inflation
I am concerned that hyper inflation is right around the corner. How would you protect yourself against it?
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gold ? gold and gold? |
get a new air gauge?
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Buy rental properties now and learn spanish
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been buying silver but I don't know if that will be enough Just trying to remember what was the hot ticket items the last time Jimmy Carter was president |
where do you see evidence of inflation, much less hyper inflation?
i see prices falling and people losing jobs. |
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Talked to a friend last night who is also worried this is in the future. I dont totally understand why other than pumping a lot of printed cash into the system has caused this in other countries. The economic strutures are very diff. though, so I dont totally get it either. |
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we've been having inflation for a while. they changed how it is measured. the sign I see for hyper inflation is about $1 Trillion in size |
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spending a trillion dollars might be inflationary in a healthy economy but we have anything but that. i look around at depressed housing, energy, and food prices, a continuing credit problem and manufacturers unable to give product away along with hundreds of thousands more unemployed every month and i think we need to be worried about a deflation cycle. you know nobody outside the government is spending now, right? how are we going to have inflation if no one will buy anything? |
just read yesterday about banks that have money to lend, but no one wants to borrow....savings higher than it has been in years. THAT is the problem here. if you sit on your money, no new jobs-loss of more jobs that exist right now. those with true means to create jobs (other than the govt-and most of the 'stimulus' package was giveaways, that won't create jobs) aren't even making the attempt right now.
it's a waiting game. everyone is waiting for things to change-but until some in the private sector with the wherewithal to make REAL changes do so, we'll continue to do bad, or worse. we've always come out of a recession, i don't see why this one will be any different. it's just a matter of how bad it gets, and how long it takes to start moving in the right direction. but it will happen, hopefully sooner rather than later. |
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of big durable goods as opposed to food items etc... to determine a # for inflation. |
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still think amnesty for illegals is coming so buy up flop house like apartments and fill em up. 10 illegals X $100/mo = :$: :$: Better yet charge $50/week and tell em it's a deal. Let's all get on board with the HOPE! |
clean out your inbox dellinger
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Govt spends money it doesnt have. Prints more money to cover. More money in circulation means dollar worth less. Dollar is worth less means must use more to buy items. so prices go up in regards to needing more dollars to buy. hence you have inflation. Of course you will counter with some obscure reference but the fact remains that the US imports lots of things and many of those products will still be cheaper being imported with inflation that created here due to high corporate taxation and unions. But of course you knew that and supported the new "stimlus" package anyway. You know the one with the huge concessions to big labor and punishments for corporations.... |
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2. No they dont. But they can certainly clean up their balance sheets with government money instead of using government money to make loans. Maybe your friend works for a smaller bank that stuck to what they were always successful with and now they have become a part of what was not their problem. (Make loans they are comfortable with because the consumer they loan to will be good for it... maybe not loans to another bank trying to get out of trouble because of unfettered greed) The problem I have with all these "ancedotes" is everyone seems to look for evidence that supports their political leaning instead of looking at the whole body of work. I just read a little bit of Paul Krugman (a liberal), the Nobel Prize winning economist, and of course his take is very different than the above (he also thinks that deflation is a more likely problem in the near future). He says it is a lesson that free-markets need to be regulated. The lesson above is dont let the government get involved in pushing loans to help less affluent indiviuals. Everyone looks for evidence that supports their own line. But in reality it looks much more complex than that. Its almost like an avalanche. It started with some fairly small economic factors in housing, which uncovered a whole lot of skirting rules and pure greed. Which then revealed the government's inept nature (Securities and Exchange Comm.) in regulation... yada yada yada. I still have yet to get a tale that sets up events without some sort of political intervention to highlight a belief. It is amazing how problems are immediately made political to prove a political position. Real problems are not solved this way... In Science anyway. If you ignore data because it does not fit your model, you get bad answers. With all due respect to Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives. |
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Very few banks are getting govt money. No one said that free markets dont need some regulation but Krugman is using the current crisis which was caused by regulation in some ways to further his cause. And winning a Nobel prize is basically only possible if one is liberal. My post was not politically leaning but stating the danger of political involvement in broad economic policy. by the way in science there are no politics hence the lack of political involvement and the reason that it makes sense. |
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he learned his lesson well...remember all the fear mongering after 9-11, and how that was used to sway congress (both reps and dems, altho dems wish to lay all blame squarely at bushes feet) to vote for a broader war? the similarities are astounding-and what if this 'stimulus' doesn't work? |
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What is disturbing that this and other articles highlight
(including Krugman) is how economics can be so politicized. I thought there was some actual math associated with it. But everyone seems to pick an index, rate, some type of economic measurement that highlights their political position. As far as Obama fear-mongering: The vast majority of what I have read and heard (which is all I can speak to obviously), is that we have a very large problem. That is systemic, real and pyschological. And I still have great faith in the innovation and the brain power that this country fosters. I would like to see this continue. I think Obama has pretty much laid it out, maybe too much (I think he is on TV way too much and he of course does not need to think about questions concerning Aroid or NCAA football tournaments) |
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Its just interesting how diff. people start off explaining a problem. 1. Govt. forcing banks to make loans to poor people without homes that have no business being in home because of lack of hard work or some other fault of their own. (extreme) 2. The greed that Madoff, Enron chiefs, and so many other executives exhibit has finally caught up with them and put all of us in the sh it hole. Rich folks suck and will strip you clean, and now look what happens. In Japan Madoff would be required to kill himself.(extreme) many conversations begin with something like the above. guess its fun... |
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Plenty of blame to go around, no doubt ... but it's pretty funny how the current financial/economic implosion happened while Bush-Cheney were at the wheel.
A full seven years after they hopped into that driver's seat, no less. Not like they didn't have enough time to deal with stuff... |
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Wall Street "Gone Wild" under Bush-Cheney 'watch'
Shocking... |
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He was merely a terrorist, extortionist, and money launderer. Your post was politically leaning. It basically says that the government should have very little involvement in the economy. That is associated with a conservative point of view. The opposite would be extensive intervention which would be considered a more liberal idea from a financial point of view. If my stereotypes are correct. |
Bernie Madoff runnin' wild and free like some half-cocked loose maiden claimer a minute before the third at Chuck Town.
Under those watchful eyes of Bush-Cheney-Cox... |
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Madoff. He was very POed at the greed factor. |
i just read that the tax 'cut' that is part of the stimulus package will result in a whopping $8 to $15 more a week to a couple. oh, WOW! so glad we're ballooning our deficit so i can have enough money to buy lunch one day a week.
this is why i said i didn't want to see a tax cut-it's not enough to affect any one persons day to day existence, but it sure can add to the debt that will affect future investment in this country. |
[quote=Danzig]i just read that the tax 'cut' that is part of the stimulus package will result in a whopping $8 to $15 more a week to a couple. oh, WOW! so glad we're ballooning our deficit so i can have enough money to buy lunch one day a week.
this is why i said i didn't want to see a tax cut-it's not enough to affect any one persons day to day existence, but it sure can add to the debt that will affect future investment in this country.[/QUOTE I told you so! |
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