CDOs

Insolvent

So someone put up a link to this graph and my jaw fucking dropped. I thought, OK- you’re no economist. Ask one what this means. This is the email I just got:

It means the banking system is insolvent.

So I was right to take it seriously. SN has been on economic fire lately too, and this is another of his powerful posts about why high gas prices have to do with the fuckups in the banking/financial/Fed system as much as theiving, murderous, greedy oil men. Not to send you to the same place over and over, but Sean-Paul is also harping on some related things, and this sticks with me b/c I know it is true, despite the fact that a lot of us don’t want to hear it:

that is the tax-burden of we GenXers—a very small age cohort in the grand scheme of things—is going to climb and climb and climb, being saddled as we are with massive amounts of soon-to-be retirees and war debt and 25 years of profligate government spending. And that’s a huge tax increases to sustain a lower standard of living—or at least one that doesn’t rise.

As Mish notes, one of two things is going to happen: boomers will get less than their promised benefits or we get the crap taxed out of us. I’m thinking it will be a combo of both, except most of the burden will come in taxes, the AARP being as strong as is. The piper, excuse the cliche, has to be paid. And he wants coin, not IOUs.

Does anyone else have an opposite conclusion? If so I’m happy to hear about it. But we’re hosed. Plain and simple.
Oh, and oil hit $132 a barrel today. Feels good, yeah?

I want to hear hardcore, policy based responses from anyone who supports the remaining Dem candidates: what is your candidate’s plan (not a speech, but a plan) and how does it address the utterly rotten (and at this point, also murderous) clusterfuck we call the financial world? Harvard (and Chicago, ya, ya) MBAs and prize-winning “economists” got us into this mess. From my reading (and I admit I could be wrong) both the Dem candidates, and obviously McCentury, have clustered about them very Mediocre Economic Minds. If that’s true, I don’t expect to see the kind of truly progressive, visionary economic policy in the next administration we desperately need. And I’m starting to get really pissed about it.

I already have sacrificed for the political and economic decisions of others, others whom I told over and over again, “It won’t work and it’ll end up costing us both more if you do it that way.” Now, millions of people, not just my age but all of us, are being forced to accept similar burdens. And of course, no Rich People are worried right now. And why should they be? No one is expecting them to shoulder anything but this fall’s pret-a-porter.  Read more