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To: RJA_ who wrote (73740)5/29/2010 2:28:20 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
Thanks RJA - but if this is the case with the USD why people and more so financial institution buy the USD and USD denominated assets?

After all the value of the USD will fall and any USD denominated (hard) assets may or will rise generating a fake income event which is taxable in the country of origin if the investor lives outside the US.

Plainly it does not make sense except for US taxpayers - oh well in a way

There is no logic of buying USD at present time and I still see the EUR bashing as a ploy to lure people worldwide in buying US debt

Unfortunate this strategy solves short term budgetary problems but longer term the BO administration are bringing the US and the world on the brink of a new financial disaster – as there will be not enough savings worldwide to save the US of A



To: RJA_ who wrote (73740)5/29/2010 1:29:10 PM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
Citigroup: Global Public Finances in Worst Shape Since 1900
Friday, 28 May 2010 08:02
By: Dan Weil

The government finances of developed countries have deteriorated to the worst condition in more than 100 years, says Citigroup Chief Economist Willem Buiter.

“The public finances in the majority of advanced industrial countries are in a worse state today than at any time since the industrial revolution, except for wartime episodes and their immediate aftermaths,” he wrote in a recent report for clients.

“Most of the richest industrial nations . . . are on unsustainable fiscal-financial trajectories.”

Naturally the fiscal woes will have a negative impact on countries’ economies.

“Restoring fiscal balance will be a drag on growth for years to come,” Buiter said.

The numbers aren’t pretty. Last year the budget deficit totaled 13.6 percent of GDP in Greece, 11.5 percent in the United Kingdom and 11.2 percent in the United States.

“Unsustainable public finances are not just an issue for Greece, the other countries of the southwest euro area, the euro area (as a whole) or the European Union,” Buiter wrote.

“The overall fiscal position of the euro area is stronger than that of the U.K., Japan and the U.S.”

Many say the United States is headed for trouble.

“When Washington is compelled by the bond market to finally confront the full force of a sovereign debt crisis, it may prove as impotent in the face of global market forces as the euro zone,” financial author Sheldon Filger wrote on The Huffington Post.

huffingtonpost.com