Thursday, October 10, 2013

Another depression



As you can see for yourself, they are following the same trajectory! Our research shows that since late 2009, for every one-percent increase in food stamps usage in the U.S., the S&P 500 increased two percent!

During the same time, the S&P 500 has increased from around the 1,000 level to above 1,600—an increase of more than 55%.

This is very troublesome. And it’s a black-and-white example of how the rich (those buying stocks) are getting richer in this country, while the poor (those who can’t afford to buy stocks) are getting poorer.

An average American would think we should not be seeing the poor getting poorer when our government is spending rigorously and our central bank is printing $85.0 billion a month in new money—all in the name of economic growth. After all, doesn’t economic growth mean the standard of living improves for everyone?

The reality is simple: the Fed’s action of aggressively creating trillions of dollars in new paper money is helping the rich to a much larger degree than it is helping the average American Joe.

And in the next few weeks, we’ll hear that Congress has increased the government’s debt ceiling for the 79th time since 1960.

What’s next is the big question: how does the U.S. plan to deal with its national debt, with the mountain of debt growing trillions of dollars bigger and the “money in the system” growing by billions of dollars each month?

This month, the government of Poland confiscated half of the private pension funds in the country to pay for its national debt. (Source: Reuters, September 4, 2013.) Through this technique, the government will be taking bond holdings from the pensions, and leaving them with stocks. Why would a country do that? Well, to borrow even more.

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