Looking for the Lab Economics? Get all information & latest update on Economics. Find the best Economics information updating blog today.
Showing posts with label Social Security. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Security. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Social Security, Ponzi Schemes, and Leprechaun Economics
by Gary North
I want to discuss an article. I may be exaggerating, but I regard this article as the most sophisticated exercise in terminal naiveté that I have ever read. It is an intelligent article with respect to the problems that it lays out. It is dealing with the Ponzi scheme economics of the modern world. Certainly, I am in favor of articles that discuss modern government economic policies as Ponzi schemes. I have been doing this for over 45 years, and I see no reason to stop now, especially since we are 45 years closer to the end of the Ponzi schemes.
Yet at the same time, I am always dismayed to see an article written about the inevitable Ponzi scheme collapse of the modern economic world that begins with some version of this assurance: if we act now, we can solve this. It is not too late. The article begins as follows:
Etichette:
Ben Bernanke,
Central Bank Policy,
Ponzi scheme,
Social Security
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Fiscal Cliff Explained - How Do We Land?
Etichette:
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
Debt,
debt us,
deflation,
FED,
Fiscal Cliff,
Gold and Silver,
gold market,
Inflation,
Investment,
Mike Maloney,
Quantitative Easing,
Social Security
Monday, November 12, 2012
Carlo Ponzi, Alias Uncle Sam
by Gary North
Carlo "Charles" Ponzi was a con man who was the Bernie Madoff of his era. For two years, 1918 to 1920, he sold an impossible dream: a scheme to earn investors 50% profit in 45 days. He paid off old investors with money generated from new investors. The scheme has been imitated ever since.
Every Ponzi scheme involves five elements:
1. A promise of statistically impossible high returns
2. An investment story that makes no sense economically
3. Greedy investors who want something for nothing
4. A willing suspension of disbelief by investors
5. Investors' angry rejection of exposures by investigators
Strangely, most Ponzi schemes involve a sixth element: the unwillingness of the con man to quit and flee when he still can. Bernie Madoff is the supreme example. But Ponzi himself established the tradition.
Etichette:
debt us,
deflation,
ECB,
FED,
financial education,
Inflation,
QE3,
Social Security
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)