Re: Financial topics
Posted: Wed Sep 24, 2008 1:41 pm
I really hope you guys aren't encouraging people to make a "run on their banks" - this is just silly talk. If people start withdrawing lots of cash, it is likely to get stolen, or even put their lives in danger, and its value will be destroyed by inflation (if there is any).
Before the '29 crash and during the depression, we were on the gold standard - this is vastly different than the fiat system we have today. Currently our debt to GDP ratio is just 50% (compared to 60% being typical for many European countries). We could write off the ENTIRE value of ALL FDIC insured funds in every bank in the entire country, which by the way is just $4.3 trillion, and we STILL WOULD BE WAY below the 150% debt to GDP ratio that Japan CURRENTLY has.
There is absolutely NO RISK whatsoever to your FDIC insured funds. Anyone who tells you otherwise simply does not know what they are talking about.
Plan for realities, not fantasies. And if you find yourself thriving on attention or sensationalization because otherwise nothing interesting is happening in your life, I suggest taking up a new and more constructive hobby.
In my opinion, high unemployment (like the 30's) is very UNlikely, and therefore, a complete collapse of the system is essentially impossible. People will not stop paying their mortgages as long as they have jobs. Look to Japan for precedent on what is likely to happen in the US over the next 10 years. Japan had a MASSIVE stock market plunge (80%+) and real estate collapse coupled with deflation (credit crisis and contraction). And yet unemployment never rose above 6%. A total system collapse is not in the cards because we can do exactly what Japan did, which is borrow massive amounts of money to ensure that credit remains available and that there is no prolonged lock up like we experienced during the great depression. Stockholders and bondholders may very well get wiped out, and that is something you should be concerned about. However as Japan demonstrated, this does not have to lead to massive unemployment.
Before the '29 crash and during the depression, we were on the gold standard - this is vastly different than the fiat system we have today. Currently our debt to GDP ratio is just 50% (compared to 60% being typical for many European countries). We could write off the ENTIRE value of ALL FDIC insured funds in every bank in the entire country, which by the way is just $4.3 trillion, and we STILL WOULD BE WAY below the 150% debt to GDP ratio that Japan CURRENTLY has.
There is absolutely NO RISK whatsoever to your FDIC insured funds. Anyone who tells you otherwise simply does not know what they are talking about.
Plan for realities, not fantasies. And if you find yourself thriving on attention or sensationalization because otherwise nothing interesting is happening in your life, I suggest taking up a new and more constructive hobby.
In my opinion, high unemployment (like the 30's) is very UNlikely, and therefore, a complete collapse of the system is essentially impossible. People will not stop paying their mortgages as long as they have jobs. Look to Japan for precedent on what is likely to happen in the US over the next 10 years. Japan had a MASSIVE stock market plunge (80%+) and real estate collapse coupled with deflation (credit crisis and contraction). And yet unemployment never rose above 6%. A total system collapse is not in the cards because we can do exactly what Japan did, which is borrow massive amounts of money to ensure that credit remains available and that there is no prolonged lock up like we experienced during the great depression. Stockholders and bondholders may very well get wiped out, and that is something you should be concerned about. However as Japan demonstrated, this does not have to lead to massive unemployment.