Financial markets around the world are now desperately dependent on
central bank stimulus. The US recovery is largely dependent on the Federal Reserve
funneling loans into the system via the quantitative easing process and
other archaic forms of money development. It is interesting how the
Greek stock market rallied this week merely on the notion that
pro-bailout parties will be elected and thus allows even more debt to be injected
into the system. Yet this does not solve the core problem that too
much debt is swimming in the system. Central banks do not create any
real tangible product in the economy. They have the incredible power to
inject resources into banks and thus create “money” in the real
economy. Yet this only happens if banks lend this out to consumers
instead of using the funds to speculate in complicated global money making schemes. The whipsaw behavior of the market highlights the massive addiction to central banking stimulus we are in.
The Euro crisis reaches a critical stage
With record high unemployment in Spain and downgrades hitting, the Spanish 10-year bond crossed a troubling threshold this week hitting 7 percent:
Read more: http://www.blacklistednews.com/The_global_addiction_of_central_banking_stimulus_/20045/0/38/38/Y/M.html
The Euro crisis reaches a critical stage
With record high unemployment in Spain and downgrades hitting, the Spanish 10-year bond crossed a troubling threshold this week hitting 7 percent:
Read more: http://www.blacklistednews.com/The_global_addiction_of_central_banking_stimulus_/20045/0/38/38/Y/M.html
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