Here's an article on the 'plight' of Generation Y:fifthcolumn wrote:So looks like Graduates are basicaly fecked (if it's a single income).
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/wait-but- ... 30620.html
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Here's an article on the 'plight' of Generation Y:fifthcolumn wrote:So looks like Graduates are basicaly fecked (if it's a single income).
It's at a time like this that I am inclined to look at what is real and matters and discount what is not real because, sooner or later, it won't matter.UndercoverElephant wrote:They are predicting a massive property crash, and I'm not sure they are right.
Their analysis of the situation is spot on, apart from one thing. What is happening right now has never happened before on the global scale it is happening now, and that means the outcome is going to be different to all the times something like this happened on a national or regional scale. In other words, it is effectively the whole world that is in trouble, because everywhere is using the same fiat currency system - even the countries that aren't broke (e.g. China). In previous instances when a country or region suffered financial collapse, that collapse was measured relative to the non-collapse of the rest of the world. But what if it is the whole world that is going down together? This has not happened.
My guess is that we are going to see money-printing on a scale unprecedented even now. Every country with fiat money will keep printing, resulting in a runaway house price boom - we are just as likely to see hyperinflation in house prices as we are to see a house price crash.
I don't think anybody can predict how this ends, apart from that it is going to be very messy. There is simply NO way for anybody to protect themselves. Doesn't matter if your wealth is in bonds, stocks/shares, cash, property or gold. Any of them could go tits up, one way or another.
Maybe.stevecook172001 wrote:It's at a time like this that I am inclined to look at what is real and matters and discount what is not real because, sooner or later, it won't matter.UndercoverElephant wrote:They are predicting a massive property crash, and I'm not sure they are right.
Their analysis of the situation is spot on, apart from one thing. What is happening right now has never happened before on the global scale it is happening now, and that means the outcome is going to be different to all the times something like this happened on a national or regional scale. In other words, it is effectively the whole world that is in trouble, because everywhere is using the same fiat currency system - even the countries that aren't broke (e.g. China). In previous instances when a country or region suffered financial collapse, that collapse was measured relative to the non-collapse of the rest of the world. But what if it is the whole world that is going down together? This has not happened.
My guess is that we are going to see money-printing on a scale unprecedented even now. Every country with fiat money will keep printing, resulting in a runaway house price boom - we are just as likely to see hyperinflation in house prices as we are to see a house price crash.
I don't think anybody can predict how this ends, apart from that it is going to be very messy. There is simply NO way for anybody to protect themselves. Doesn't matter if your wealth is in bonds, stocks/shares, cash, property or gold. Any of them could go tits up, one way or another.
So bearing in mind the above and accepting your argument that everyone is in the same leaky FIAT boat, if I think out loud about this, each of the players will be tempted into printing. Not just because they have debt to inflate away, but because if even the creditor nations do not print sufficient to debase their currencies in line with others' printing, their currency will become too expensive and their exports will collapse. so they have to join the printing party as well. Eventually the whole world's currencies are debased, in which case, the relative levels of debt to credit will not have improved for any of the debtor nations because everyone has debased on lock-step with one another.
So, back to square one of some people owing shit to other people that they cannot pay.
What happens then?
It seems to me that when all the bullshit is peeled away, there are some people on one side of the planet (Chindia et al) who have been making stuff and selling it to people on the other side of the planet (Western Europe and the USA), but who have been paid for that stuff with FIAT promises to pay that are not worth the paper they are written on or the digital storage space they occupy.
So what happens then? War, I guess.
That's because the publicly stated expectations to the contrary are bollocksTarrel wrote:Federal Reserve announced today that they are maintaining the QE programme, in spite of expectations to the contrary.
Looks like the money-printing continues..
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-24152993
The USA goes down all guns blazing and the world lets off the biggest firework display in human history? I can't see it ending up any other way than via some major global conflict.UndercoverElephant wrote:It seems obvious to me that the only way the current global economic/monetary scenario can end is with a massive shift of power away from the US and towards China. What this means for the UK I do not know, but I doubt it is anything good.
In the podcast, he likens the World's largest corporations to some of the autonomous city-states and highly influential families that were around at the time of the Renaissance; separate from, and even more powerful than, nation-states. The figures he quotes on wealth and market-share concentration are staggering.In Jim’s first Big Picture topic, “Land of the Giants”, he discusses how the globalization of capitalism in recent years has unleashed a process of intense industrial concentration. Jim explains how the concentration is growing and roughly 1400 global corporations are now acting like independent fiefdoms, exerting tremendous influence on global economies. Despite the rise of Asia, the vast majority of these firms are based in western countries.
I've always liked true stories.Snail wrote:For eg, a Government will 'invite' a metanational in to run part (and then all) of the country. The metanationals increasingly become similar to nation-states themselves.