Historic Economic Amnesia

300px-amnesia_for_dummiesOne of the most painful things to see is how pundits, cable networks, commercials, and hearsay can dominate the headlines, but practical financial advice on how to stabilize the economy fall to the waste-side. So the latest distraction is a Dow 10000 and other personalities selling the idea that only the government can dig us out of this economic mess. If it wasn’t clear before, let me elaborate who the guilty parties are in this current economic mess:

  • Federal Reserve Bank aka The Government
  • Financial apathy among the citizens of the United State of America
  • Poor ethics among various investment houses, housing appraisers, rating agencies, mortgage brokers, commercial banks, especially Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae
  • Unintelligent Regulation
  • Capitalism (sike)

No matter what anyone says, capitalism is not the problem for the current economic crisis. Unethical individuals taking advantage of the financially naive, coupled with a rogue Federal Reserve Bank that clearly has mixed intentions is the core problem. I’m no psychologist but I’m going to be the first to offer a condition that has plagued Americans since the FED was instituted. It’s called Historic Economic Amnesia (HEA) Syndrome:

It’s the inability to grasp past guidelines of economic history and current financial events to prevent future prediction errors.

As soon as a tiny spark hits the economy, we forget about what sound economic policy really is. We also forget who the villains are who created this problem in the first place. We also forget that our financial decisions are a big part of economic policy. What really boils my blood is to see the same individuals who caused the problem claiming that they have the answer. As I said in a earlier post, we are going to the arsonist who burned our house down for advice on how to put out fires. Of course an arsonist probably understands creating and putting out fires more so than the average person, but clearly there is a ethical problem.

I have seen this author on several news shows (Morning Joe, GPS) in the last couple days; his name is Robert Skidelsky. His new book Keynes: The Return of the Master explains the career of John Maynard Keynes and his influence on today’s economic policy decisions. If you don’t have the patience to read Keynes’s original classic The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, this book will serve as a “Keynes in 24 hours” overview.

I would also suggest folks to watch the documentary Broke: The New American Dream. It serves as a good reminder of what we are dealing with.

  Economic Resources that will increase your Financial Neurons

  • Keynes: The Return of the Master by Robert Skidelsky
  • Foundation for Economic Education
    http://fee.org/
  • Broke: The New American Dream.
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