I found the term from a series of videos at Vimeo (via Coudal), but it seems to fit. In any case, welcome to The New Depression. I have to imagine that this is about what things looked like in 1929.
During the Senate discussions about the impending bailout of the banking system, Ron Paul questioned Bernanke’s authority to create money to purchase bad debt and take a gamble that they can get rid of it later. Bernanke’s response was that the Congress “is given the authority to coin money, and to regulate its value, and they delgated that to us [the Federal Reserve].” (in this video, at the 6:20 mark) Bernanke’s right, but he’s also very, very wrong. Here’s why. Read more»
via Wise Bread
Here’s the gist of it (well, a summary of a summary) - Ron Laszewski has created an economic model based on the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ definition of Peak Debt. When given data from 1925, when peak debt was last reached, Laszewski’s model correctly predicted the crash of 1929 and the subsequence decade long Great Depression. Bad news folks - we hit our peak debt in 2005. It seems to suggest that 2009 will be particularly rough, and the year following even worse.
Here’s my suggestion: don’t take on any more debt, pay off all the debt you can, and figure out how to cut your expenses to the bone. It’ll be much easier if you get to make those decisions under controlled circumstances than have them forced on you later.
Wise Bread is a great source to help get your finances under control.
