
Originally Posted by
Bikerpunk
Well, Bubbles has put the Fed's nuts in a vice.
The usual wisdom is to lower rates when the economy hits the shitter, and here's why
Back in the old days, people made shit, and people bought the shit that got made. Factories would eventually start making more shit than people were buying said shit, and so inventory would pile up.
"Stop making shit, we're trying to move this shit" basically results in the factory making cutbacks. This means that lo and behold, workers lose jobs, even less gets bought.
So they lower interest rates, so buying stuff on credit becomes more attractive, and therefore excess inventory gets sold, they need to ramp up production again, etc.
Problem is, we don't have overcapacity problems, we simply have the problem that we don't make anything and we spend and consume far more than we make. Making credit easier is digging the hole deeper.
Now, right now the USD is tanking because the petrodollar is no longer holding. The only reason why the USD has ANY value at all is that the US made a Faustian bargain with certain tribes in the Middle East that ALL oil would be bought and sold in the US dollar, making an inbuilt demand no matter how hot they ran the money printing presses. This is changing -- and as more and more countries are accepting the Euro... that means the greenback don't look too good, long term.
The financial district right now is seeing a credit crunch because the banks can't properly assess the risk of holding dodgy paper which was the result of them pooling mortgages and selling said mortgages as securities. As more defaults and forfeitures hit the books, companies are increasingly nervous about the inherent risks of owning this dodgy stuff. Banks lend you money and then sell your loan to investors, who get a percentage of your interest, but the bank gets its money back to lend to someone else. What they want is for the interest rate to go down, meaning refinancings can occur at lower rates so forefeitures go down, but lowering the interest rate will hammer a dollar already in freefall.
So the Fed Chairman is frankly fucked either way - he lowers the rate and people will bitch the dollar is worthless, and if he doesn't the stock market will continue to wibble, but more scarily, liquidity in the credit market will drop to zero, meaning companies won't be able to get the financing they need to expand, and bye bye economy.
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