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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: CusterInvestor who wrote (57229)10/31/2009 2:07:43 PM
From: CusterInvestor1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217826
 
from John Mauldin, another book suggestion with possible parallel (the talk of future pain and climactic event reminded me of TJ, oddly enough <g>:

This week, we will look at the Argentinian experience and ask ourselves whether "it" - hyperinflation - can happen here.

The Ascent of Money
I will be quoting from Niall Ferguson's recent book, The Ascent of Money. I cannot recommend this book too highly. In fact, I rank it up with my all-time favorite book on economic history, Against the Gods, by the late (and sorely missed) Peter Bernstein. There are very few books I read twice. There are too many books and not enough time. This book I will have to read at least three times, and soon, and I have a lot of underlines and mark-ups in it already.

If there were one book I could require every member of the Congress to read, it would be this one. As I read it, I am struck again and again by how fragile and yet resilient our economic systems are. Fragile in the sense that governmental policy mistakes, no matter how well-intentioned, can destroy the wealth of a nation, and resilient in that it doesn't happen more often.

In his introduction Ferguson writes, "The first step towards understanding the complexities of the financial institutions and terminology is to find out where they came from. Only understand the origins of an institution or instrument and you will find its present day roles much easier to grasp."

As is often said, those who do not understand history are doomed to repeat it. If you want to understand what is happening in the economy, what the consequences of our choices could be, then I strongly suggest you get The Ascent of Money. It is easy to read, engaging, full of moments where you are led to pull together different ideas into an "Aha!" Ferguson is a brilliant writer and historian, and we are lucky to have this book at a time when it is sorely needed. (order it at Amazon.com)

As I have been writing, the United States in particular, and the developed world in general, are faced with a series of very unpleasant, if not downright bad choices. The time for good choices was ten years ago. Now we face the prospect of painful decisions, no matter what we do. It is not a matter of pain or no pain, of somehow avoiding the consequences of our bad decisions, it is simply deciding how much pain we will take and when, or allowing the pain to build up to a climactic event. Today we look at what I think would be the worst choice of all.



To: CusterInvestor who wrote (57229)10/31/2009 8:08:56 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217826
 
<<Should one question the validity of the award based on the judges involved?>>

... i was thinking the same thing; but the book seems worthy, whatever motivations may be in the award.

<<The book "reminds us that tumult in financial markets wasn't created in the 21st century", says Lloyd Blankfein>>

... that statement is true enough, but one may add, "... and goldman has so far come on top, last scoundrel standing"