| Obama Calls Jobs Losses 'Sobering,' Urges Innovation |
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| Written by TheDailyBell.com |
| Friday, 03 July 2009 12:48 |
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Excerpt from Bloomberg..."President Barack Obama praised innovative energy companies for creating jobs on a day of "sobering news" that employers shed 467,000 jobs in the U.S. in June. "It took years for us to get into this mess, and it's going to take us more than a few months to turn it around," Obama said in a Rose Garden appearance after meeting with energy business leaders. "These are folks whose companies are helping to lead the transformation towards a clean-energy future," Obama said. "Energy is one of the pillars" of a new foundation for the U.S. economy, he said. ... Obama said the U.S. will have to "change how we use energy." He also said Energy Secretary Steven Chu will seek ways to improve energy efficiency, including the use of solar panels, at the White House." - Bloomberg If the monetary elite had been willing to let the system deflate, all would have been well, or better anyway. But this was not tolerable. Something in the area of US$10-$15 trillion was printed in America and Europe and shoved into the needy mouths of foundering banks and industrial firms. Such additional funds allowed for a "soft landing." Soft for the system anyway. Soft for those firms that had made bad investments and still have plenty to write off, however. So the correction, which would have taken a few months or a year, may stretch out to five years or longer. We've even seen estimates of ten years, the proverbial "lost" decade. (Japan had one in similar circumstances.) It is really the worst of all possible recipes. The government under the watchful eye of the monetary elite fixes the price of money. Once the bubble has blown up, the powers-that-be print more money and prop up the rotten boroughs that should rightfully have foundered and failed for good. Finally, in this latest and grimmest cycle, both European and American governments step in and suggest new business models - not models that the marketplace demands but models that the monetary elite wishes to encourage. One must be very doubtful of a recovery based on such a tenuous foundation. The mal-investments have never been purged. New and vital companies have not been able to find the funding they would otherwise get. Jobs have not been created, capital has not been made available. Finally, the new endeavors that are becoming more prominent are ones that government wants to emphasize. We don't believe there will be much of a recovery based on this scenario. ------------------------------ © Copyright 2008 - 2009 Appenzeller Business Press AG. All Rights Reserved. The Daily Bell is an informative compendium of independent economic views and analysis, which is published by Appenzeller Business Press AG. The information contained in the Daily Bell is for informational purposes only, is impersonal and not tailored to the investment needs of any particular person and should not be construed as financial or investment advice. Appenzeller Business Press AG does not accept any liability or responsibility for, nor does it verify the accurateness of the information being provided in the Daily Bell. Readers of the Daily Bell or any affiliated or linked sources or sites must accept the responsibility for performing their own due diligence before acting on any of the information provided within the report regardless of the source.
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