Category: Economics


United States to file bankruptcy by 2040


Image: (AP)

Is it really greater than a $50+ Trillion unfunded liabilities?
With nearly 80 Million retires per year for the next 20 years as
Boomers mass retirement demands will BK the USA, claims David Walker!

Healthcare costs: Medicare costs are 5 times greater then Social Security costs
Prescription drugs for retired are 8 trillion unfunded obligation alone.

Revealing investigative news report on the real fiscal caner that will end up bankrupting the United States. US Comptroller General David Walker discusses the Dirty Little Secret Everyone In Washington Knows. Entitlement programs, baby boomer generation, medicare and the prescription drug bill.


Image: Flickr/darthdowney; flickr/Gage Skidmore

Source: 4 x BK Expert Trump

Watch the roast of the Donald
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MIT professor Yasheng Huang talks about the potential dangers of
China’s shadow banking system (CSBS).

麻省理工教授談中國銀行業潛在的危機。

Globally, a study of the 11 largest national shadow banking systems found that they totalled to $50,000bn in 2007, fell to $47,000bn in 2008 but by late 2011 had climbed to $51,000bn, just over its estimated size before the crisis. Overall, the world wide SBS totalled to about $60 trillion as of late 2012

The shadow banking system is a key component of the U.S. economy, but the financial crisis has frozen it solid. Senior Editor Paddy Hirsch explains what shadow banking is and why it’s important enough to warrant its own bailout, called the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF.

Shadow Banking Explained in Detail

 

NO CHINA BUBBLE OR DOES THE FACTS SAY OTHERWISE?
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Picture Source:

http://ekonomi.milliyet.com.tr/


BROADCAST YEAR: 2012

ABOUT Nouriel Roubini

Nouriel Roubini Official Website: http://www.roubini.com

 

Nouriel Roubini is the cofounder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics, an independent, global macroeconomic and market strategy research firm. The firm’s website, Roubini.com, has been named one of the best economics web resources by BusinessWeek, Forbes, the Wall Street Journal and the Economist.

He is also a professor of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business. Dr. Roubini has extensive policy experience as well as broad academic credentials. From 1998 to 2000, he served as the senior economist for international affairs on the White House Council of Economic Advisors and then the senior advisor to the undersecretary for international affairs at the U.S. Treasury Department, helping to resolve the Asian and global financial crises, among other issues. The International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and numerous other prominent public and private institutions have drawn upon his consulting expertise.

He has published over 70 theoretical, empirical and policy papers on international macroeconomic issues and coauthored the books “Political Cycles: Theory and Evidence” (MIT Press, 1997) and “Bailouts or Bail-ins? Responding to Financial Crises in Emerging Markets” (Institute for International Economics, 2004) and “Crisis Economics: A Crash Course in the Future of Finance” (Penguin Press, 2010). Dr. Roubini’s views on global economic issues are widely cited by the media, and he is a frequent commentator on various business news programs. He has been the subject of extended profiles in the New York Times Magazine and other leading current-affairs publications. The Financial Times has also provided extensive coverage of Dr. Roubini’s perspectives. Dr. Roubini received an undergraduate degree at Bocconi University in Milan, Italy, and a doctorate in economics at Harvard University. Prior to joining Stern, he was on the faculty of Yale University’s department of economics. Source

Property developers are salivating as a home ownership wave is coming as the “thirty something” members of Generation X demand the American Dream.

These children of the baby boomers, born in the 1980s and 1990s, form a generation even larger than that of their parents. And they are quickly entering their peak marriage and family formation years.


The settling down of the largest generation to date will create unprecedented demand for starter homes and rentals. Meanwhile, new supply has all but disappeared in the wake of the bust. New home construction hit its lowest levels on record last year, breaking the record lows of the year before and the year before.

It may seem absurd to talk about it, given the foreclosure backlog that still plagues the market, but in a few short years we may actually have a housing shortage, at least in the cities attracting these new families.”

The State of Metropolitan America report portrays the demographic and social trends shaping the nation’s large metropolitan areas and discusses what they imply for public policies to secure prosperity. Alan Berube presents an overview of that report.

Video Source: The Demographic Transformation of the U.S.

Brookings Institution

See the video and infographic on the Generation X demographics…
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The report was developed by the Development Research Center of the State Council, the People’s Republic of China

BEIJING February 27, 2012 – China should complete its transition to a market economy — through enterprise, land, labor, and financial sector reforms — strengthen its private sector, open its markets to greater competition and innovation, and ensure equality of opportunity to help achieve its goal of a new structure for economic growth.

These are some of the key findings of a joint research report by a team from the World Bank and the Development Research Center of China’s State Council, which lays out the case for a new development strategy for China to rebalance the role of government and market, private sector and society, to reach the goal of a high income country by 2030.  

The report, “China 2030: Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative High-Income Society”, recommends steps to deal with the  risks facing China over the next 20 years, including the risk of a hard landing in the short term, as well as challenges posed by an ageing and shrinking workforce, rising inequality, environmental stresses, and external imbalances.

The report lays out six strategic directions for China’s future:

  • Completing the transition to a market economy;
  • Accelerating the pace of open innovation;
  • Going “green” to transform environmental stresses into green growth as a driver for development;
  • Expanding opportunities and services such as health, education and access to jobs for all people;
  • Modernizing and strengthening its domestic fiscal system;
  • Seeking mutually beneficial relations with the world by connecting China’s structural reforms to the changing international economy.
  • Development Research Center of the State Council and World Bank

    The report lays out six strategic directions for China’s future:

  • Completing the transition to a market economy;
  • Accelerating the pace of open innovation;
  • Going “green” to transform environmental stresses into green growth as a driver for development;
  • Expanding opportunities and services such as health, education and access to jobs for all people;
  • Modernizing and strengthening its domestic fiscal system;
  • Seeking mutually beneficial relations with the world by connecting China’s structural reforms to the changing international economy.

Download the Report
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