Syntagma Digital
Moneyizor
Moneyizor

How 9/11 caused the credit crunch

9/11 I’ve written a post in Syntagma on how 9/11 caused the credit crunch and most of the problems now facing the world.

These problems include, rocketing food prices, chronic wars in the Middle East, the credit crunch, high oil and commodity prices, and the slow motion global recession.

On the credit crunch. Economist Joseph Stigler’s book The Three Trillion Dollar War argues persuasively that Alan Greenspan’s policy of holding interest rates below optimal levels, for longer than anyone deemed necessary, was aimed at masking the enormous cost of the Iraq war on the American economy.

Together will rising house prices, the loose policy opened the way to a splurge of mortgage lending to the U.S. trailer-park poor, the sub-prime end of the market, and the rather guilty repackaging of it into faux Triple-A assets, which were sold on around the world. From those actions, we now have the words “Great Depression” hanging over us again.

On commodity prices, led by oil, now standing at close to $120 a barrel and its knock-on effect in all other markets, especially food, the same argument applies.

“In an inflationary environment, merchants tend to hoard their stocks in warehouses, betting on higher prices down the line. It’s a one-way bet right now, so a lot of the world’s grain output is locked away, pushing up prices at an even greater rate and shoving millions into hunger.”

Read the whole of the article.

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