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Why The World's Entrepreneurs Have Not Rescued The U.S. And European Economies.

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No DUplicitous DUpe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 03:03 PM
Original message
Why The World's Entrepreneurs Have Not Rescued The U.S. And European Economies.
Why The World's Entrepreneurs Have Not Rescued The U.S. And European Economies
posted with permission from http://sane-ramblings.blogspot.com/
(note: Although this piece is a bit long, it is well worth the little extra time to read by anyone worried about the economy and what it will take to resurrect it.)

For the last 40 years the recovery from EVERY Recession was led by entrepreneurs, those gutsy people who start or build upon mom & pop size operations or who risk their money to create new businesses or to save old ones.

In the past, they’ve been the primary job engine and the spark that built a fire under America and got it going again. And when the massive U.S. economy got going, it took other economies with it.

But this time that’s not happening. Why?

When the U.S. government bailed out corporate giants such as AIG, Citibank, Chrysler, General Motors, Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo and many other firms it called “too big to fail,” it tried to stop a natural business cycle, in these cases, not allowing them to bear the losses they so richly earned.

But by rushing in with vast sums of taxpayer money and borrowing more to bail out these grossly mismanaged firms it shook the confidence in the financial stability of the nation. And if that wasn’t enough, the U.S. convinced other nations to do what it was doing.

Now Europe and Japan are awash in red ink and staggering as well. Nearly everyone with the exception of Brazil, Chili, China, Germany, South Korea, Taiwan and a few oil exporting nations and a handful of others depend upon borrowing (or printing) money to keep themselves afloat.

But borrow the money from whom? Those who have cash reserves are leery and borrowing from the nations who also need money is becoming a Ponzi scheme the magnitude of which the world has never seen before. The International Monetary Fund and the European Bank are extensions of those other troubled nations.

Meanwhile, in the U.S. the unemployed, under employed, furloughed and the number of pay cut employees and those who have given up looking for jobs keeps growing. The unemployed alone are now an army of nearly 15 million people. And multiply those numbers by four or five because their families are also affected.

Car sales, home sales and retail sales of nearly every type are falling. That’s no surprise for the unemployed and underemployed have cut spending and many other people are scared to spend. U.S. household debt is at 122% of disposable income which means people are desperately trying to pay down debt, not go on shopping sprees.

While in real estate, prices are being artificially propped up by the U.S. government, which claims the market has turned upward. But rather than solve the problems, it makes them worse because it forestalls the investments many entrepreneurs would make in real estate if they believed in the values.

With time, the U.S. government will be overwhelmed by its massive real estate liabilities and with its financing partners, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac it will have to let go. As this happens, values will fall to their real market levels, and buyers will emerge.

At these low prices, entrepreneurs can readily afford to buy and slash rents, which means home and apartment rents will drop making them more affordable. And commercial rents will fall as well making it cost effective for other entrepreneurs to occupy that space to start restaurants, clothing stores and other shops and HIRE employees.

Also, some of these “too big to fail” firms continue to need bailouts. Even now, despite their big profits, the giant banks are still so weak; the U.S. government continues to hold interest rates at near zero, deeply penalizing savers, so the banks can rebuild their resources.

Yet they haven’t changed their ways. In a series of articles, The Wall Street Journal disclosed that many of them use financial “window dressing” of the type that bankrupted Lehman Brothers. They hide the size of their liabilities each quarter from their shareholders and customers using financial gimmicks to make the results appear far better than what they actually are.

Of course the banks’ management gets big payouts based upon those grossly inaccurate results
But there is some good news here. If these banks fail again, a whole new group of entrepreneurs will arise, some to liquidate their assets and others to buy those assets for pennies on the dollar.

To help those entrepreneurs, a new fleet footed industry of property management, consulting and financial service firms will come into being and they in turn will hire others to help them.

And there will be more opportunities. As the U.S. government purchased many billions of dollars of what they call “toxic assets” (a contradictory term) from bailed out firms, they will need to hire small firms as well as big ones to help liquidate these portfolios for whatever the market will bear, once again attracting entrepreneurs.

But entrepreneurs know more giant failures are waiting to happen. Many states from California to Illinois to New York are in dire financial circumstances. Most want a U.S. government bail out yet the U.S. government is insolvent and can only pay its bills by borrowing and printing money.

Some of these states are huge. California for example is the world’s 7th largest economy. If it fails, it will cause much more unemployment, endanger employee pensions and threaten the financial viability of those firms and individuals it contracts with. Its unsecured bond holders may also lose some of their money.

And these failures could wash through cities and counties, as many of them look to the states to partly reimburse them for vital programs, in some cases including police and fire protection.

Then there’s the worst news of all. The U.S. economy is dependent on perpetual war and weapon and fighter jet production. Millions of jobs depend on it. America has 5% of the world’s population and 50% of the world’s military spending. And it’s at taxpayer expense.

Unless your firm is Halliburton, Blackwater or the like, this is a financial and moral disaster that is sucking America dry. The U.S. is like Yosemite Sam. It’s hollering & firing its pistols & threatening everyone. Like many a cartoon, it hasn’t noticed it has already walked off a cliff and is hanging in mid-air high above the valley below.

It is simply waiting for its Bugs Bunny moment when the little critter points out the obvious, that it is hanging in mid-air and then like Yosemite Sam, it will fall far into the chasm below.

Entrepreneurs know we Americans must pay the price for our and our government’s financial and moral misdeeds. But paying that price can unite us as happened in the Great Depression as we collectively work our way through hard times to a better future.

Hopefully, it will be an entrepreneurial driven future led by Silicon Valley firms, in which investors from all over the world invest capital to create entire new industries as they did in spawning Apple Computer, Facebook, Google, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Oracle and other top quality firms.

And by an entrepreneurial resurgence of mom and pop size operations, many with 20 employees or less, that have long been the employment and taxpaying backbone of our nation.
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Skink Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 03:18 PM
Response to Original message
1. this is why the fed was created.
Just in case there was no J.P. Morgan around during one of these busts.
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ThomWV Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 03:20 PM
Response to Original message
2. 2 years ago I could have read this sort of stuff on the Free Republic website
and now days it gets recommendations on DU. Things have certainly changed.
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No DUplicitous DUpe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 04:24 PM
Response to Reply #2
6. I don't think so....
The author is both literate and wise. I don't think you would find that type of author, at FR.

and 3 years ago, you could have read this, from the same author:
http://www.kazantoday.com/WeeklyArticles/wk159.html

A Stunning Alert: How To Protect Yourself From The Coming Financial Crisis

On only one other occasion have I ever pre-empted the regular inspirational column and that was on October 18, 2005 telling readers that real estate was at or near its top and prices would soon fall and keep on falling. Unfortunately, that is what happened and the fall is continuing.

Today, I’m giving you a frightening financial alert, so that you can protect yourself. Whether you live in the U.S. or elsewhere, you will be affected. We’ll return to our regular column next week.

When “How To Protect Yourself From The Coming Financial Crisis” was first published on my other website www.saneramblings.com on November 20, 2007, it predicted the value of the dollar would get cut in half, real estate would lose 1/3 of its value, millions would lose their jobs and the price of gas would go up.

At that time, just 7 months ago, it was hard for people to accept these predictions could happen. But what a 7 months it has been.

At that time, a barrel of oil traded for $99, today (6/30) it trades for $140. The dollar has lost 20% of its value, real estate prices are falling and hundreds of thousands of people are losing their jobs. And our economy has begun an inflationary spiral that will soon be felt by everyone.

In 2009, our economy is going to collapse, the worst since the Great Depression. You will see much higher interest rates and tremendous fallout from the crashing real estate market and from crumbling financial institutions. Gasoline prices and availability are anyone’s guess.

To postpone the impact of this coming financial disaster, cynically U.S. politicians have tried to assure the public and stoke the economy until after the November elections.

The U.S. government told the American people and the world things were fine. When they were proven wrong, they bailed out Bear Stearns, lowered interest rates which snowballed the dollar’s decline, borrowed $168 billion and sent it out as tax rebates and borrowed even more money to expand their military spending, while pursuing tax cuts for the wealthy.

With such convoluted policies, it’s no wonder the U.S. economy is falling apart and it will take global economies with it.

The good news is all of these rapidly growing problems can be fixed, but under new leadership, and as Americans, only with your and my involvement.

If you don’t like high gas and grocery prices, and America’s future being drained by war, you’re going to have to raise your voice and let the government know you mean business. For it is your government, not the Pentagon’s, not the lobbyists’ and not the politicians’.

In the meantime, you and I have each other. If you go to www.saneramblings.com and click on “How To Protect Yourself …” and review the postings since November 20th, you’ll find numerous ways to save money or to take other constructive actions to protect yourself. And I encourage you to share your ideas there as well.

We are headed for tough times but together we will get through them. As a result of the pain we will suffer, we will become more politically active, for if we don’t we’ll be ruled by fanatics and our Constitution will be a memory. We’ll also become much wiser and more compassionate to others in need for we will better understand what it is like to be them.

-----------------------------------------

Recommended!




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ThomWV Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 07:12 PM
Response to Reply #6
11. Just look at that first idiotic sentence ...
"over the last 40 years the recovery from EVERY Recession was led by entrepreneurs, those gutsy people who start or build upon mom & pop size operations ..." Nonsense, just plain and simple utter nonsense. It is the old Republican line all over again, pull yourself up by the bootstraps, and Government can only do harm. Horseshit!
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No DUplicitous DUpe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-12-10 01:19 AM
Response to Reply #11
14. Did you read the article above?
The author knows what he is talking about.
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OHdem10 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 03:40 PM
Response to Original message
3. Excellent article. Let us hope Entrpeneurs step up here in America.
The Multi-Nationals will take the money and build the companies
in foreign lands where they find the cheapest labor.
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Coyote_Bandit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 05:04 PM
Response to Reply #3
9. Thing is that the folks who are willing to step up
lack the capital and the access to capital and the ability to insure against the healthcare risk.

Rather than use tax dollars to stimulate the creation and growth of small business our government chose to give stimulus dollars to established businesses - assuming that would trickle down through the rest of the economy. To be so smart, those guys can be pretty damned stupid sometimes.
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The Backlash Cometh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 04:01 PM
Response to Original message
4. Entrepeneur is such a misnomer.
They're not inventing anything new. Except maybe a new way to swindle money from other people.
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Hydra Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 04:11 PM
Response to Original message
5. This is kind of a silly article
While the premise is correct, there is no emerging from this capitalist created mess that involves capitalist solutions.

Money wants to move. The people who stole it aren't going to spend it, unless they think they can get a 20% return.
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Coyote_Bandit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 04:57 PM
Response to Original message
7. Meanwhile
There are some long-term unemployed folks here who have given up hope of finding work but are skilled and willing to start some of those Mom and Pop businesses - but lack the capital and access to healthcare necessary to mitigate the risk.

And rather than assist these folks the dumbshits we've elected to office choose to bail out the big corporate guys.

Small wonder the economy is in the crapper.
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Melissa G Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 06:54 PM
Response to Reply #7
10. Access to health care. That is the key. That is much of what holds
this country and economy hostage. We have to affordably cover everyone at least at a base level, so we can compete in a global economy.
Oh, BTW, my relatively useless, catastrophic level healthcare costs just doubled after they promised the union it would not change for 2 to 3 years. The company blames it on Obama, of course. More money just draining out of the family coffers for no real coverage. :grr:
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Coyote_Bandit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 07:28 PM
Response to Reply #10
12. I haven't seen a doctor
in over 15 years and I spend a small fortune each year for health insurance that carries a $10,000 annual deductble, a co-pay beyond that and does not cover doctor visits. And I'm a non-smoker with no documented pre-existing conditions.

I'm also long-term unemployed and have long since exhausted the one tier of unemployment compensation that was available to me. I have some assets and some retirement savings which I am slowly depleting. Apparently my earlier efforts to limit my consumption and live frugally are now being "rewarded" because I find that I do not qualify for any kind of assistance.

I figure I will never work a traditional job ever again. I'd love to start a small little business to support myself. But that will require that I risk my future and everything I have accumulated because I will have no ability to mitigate my risk in undertaking such an endeavor. Even if I do everything right and succeed in business I can lose everything through no fault of my own (e.g., by being severly injured in an auto accident where I am not at fault and the other driver is uninsured forcing me to assume large medical costs).

I live in a nation where the government actively undermines my needs and interests. But the government damn sure takes care of the big corporate boys. Color me unimpressed.
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Melissa G Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-12-10 10:46 AM
Response to Reply #12
16. amen. n/t
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Oregone Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 05:00 PM
Response to Original message
8. An anti-Keynes rant it appears
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FooshIt Donating Member (122 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-11-10 07:30 PM
Response to Original message
13. Being an entreprenuer is nothing to be proud of
Why all this ass kissing on a democratic website?
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No DUplicitous DUpe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-12-10 01:47 AM
Response to Reply #13
15. Really?

Entrepreneur
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrepreneur

...one that introduces new technologies into the workplace or market, increasing efficiency, productivity or generating new products or services. Other academics say the entrepreneur is an organiser of factors or production that acts as a catalyst for economic change. Shackle argues that the entrepreneur is a highly creative individual that imagines new solutions providing new opportunities for reward.

You said, "nothing to be proud of" I respectfully disagree.

Peace.
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