Ziggy the republicans told me that everything is perfect all around the world when it comes to economies.
Westkoast,
Take this for whatever you think it is worth.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122039890722392873.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries
It is written by a Brit Mr. Keith Marsden, a fellow of the Centre for Policy Studies, was formerly an adviser at the World Bank and a senior economist in the International Labor Organization.
The Centre for Policy Studies is a British think tank started in the 1970's by among others Lady Thatcher.
The World Bank you know about.
The International Labor Organization is a UN group focused on international labor rights, hardly of bastion of free market economics.
ziggy, this is a fascinating article and we all greatly appreciate you doing the research to find the good stuff.
But the one thing I do not get is that this article clearly is stating that, under Bush, the U.S. economy is not nearly as bad as thought, especially with the rhetoric of the currrent political campaign, when things get blown out of proportion anyway.
Why is it that I feel much worse off financially now then I did under Clinton, for example?
Jomal,
I am not going to take any position on why you feel the way you feel. For you, you might in fact be worse off, you might be better off but don't want to admit it, or any be in a wide variety of different circumstances. Feel free to feel however you want about your financial circumstances.
I am in the housing industry, and I know that without a doubt, I am demonstrably worse off financially today than I was 2, 4, 6, and 8 years ago. My work circumstance the last 16 months has been absolute hell, layoffs for lots of really good people, financial losses everywhere, good family owned companies shuttered, suicides of good people who have lost everything. We are not at the bottom, and I have still very concerned about the next 12 months. I hope I am one of those left standing, but I am not quite sure what the future holds.
I am not going to predict the future or some other market timed event. I am not smart enough, nor do I have enough hubris to believe that my predictions carry any weight, nor do I have any special insight into the future. I do know what I see, and this economy is not in recession, regardless of what the talking heads may wish to try and tell me.
Our economy has a number of structural problems, and there are some grave risks out there, but we are no worse off, and probably far better off than a number of the countries of the world. The Brits, Kiwi's, Italians, Spanish, Japanese, and probably very soon the Aussie's are going to have a housing meltdown that on a scaled basis are going to be far worse than what we are experiencing. China is not the rosy wonderful growing place we all hear it be. They have some very choppy waters ahead. Chile, Argentina, France, Germany, Iceland, South Africa are all teetering.