Subscribe to The Daily Advance RSS Feed Mobile Access E-Newsletter Log In or Register as a New User 
Classifieds
Automotive
Real Estate
Employment
Merchandise

Home > How They See Us > Archives > 2008 > September > 24 > Entry

The end of American capitalism as we know it?

This looks ominous. “The World As We Know It Is Going Down.” That’s one of the headlines in Germany’s Der Spiegel newspaper. It refers to the writer’s view that the U.S. financial crisis is signaling an end to U.S. capitalism as we’ve known it.

“The only thing that is certain is that the era of the unbridled free-market economy in the U.S. has passed — at least for now. The near nationalization of AIG, America’s largest insurance company, with an $85 billion cash infusion — a bill footed by taxpayers — was a staggering move.”

Another article in the same newspaper says that the rest of the world shouldn’t have to bear the burden for America’s lapses. U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is asking other countries to help buy up bad U.S. debt. The U.S. government is putting up $700 billion in taxpayer money in the hopes that the measure might restore stability in the financial system. Some countries are planning to help. But the German government has answered this call quickly and clearly: no.

The article quotes various German economists who are critical of the American rescue package for a number of reasons. Some don’t believe the plan is a well-balanced one, arguing that the government is only buying bad risks and, in doing so, nationalizing the losses. Other say the U.S. government should be more focused on passing regulations so that this type of crisis never happens again.

No matter what, many Europeans feel that — since so many of America’s bad loans were sold abroad — they’ve already had to bear enough of the burden.

Permalink | Comments (1) | Post your comment |

Comments

By Dan

October 28, 2008 3:35 PM | Link to this

Interesting seeing how most of the worlds large economies have a worse Debt to Gnp ratio than the us Germany France Belgium Japan Norway Canada and Israel and the only significant economies (those with debt under 20% and in the top 25 world wide) are Hong Kong and Australia. So quite frankly we as always bear the burden and do it better. We provide the rest of the world the luxury to whine

Commenting is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M-F

Post a comment



Note: Your e-mail address will be displayed.

Remember me?

There will be a delay of up to 5 minutes before your comment appears.

You may use the following formatting:
Bold: **this text will be bolded** = this text will be bolded
Italic: *this text will be italic* = this text will be italic
Link: [text to be linked](http://www.ajc.com) = text to be linked




*HTML not allowed in comments. Your e-mail address is required.

 


Marshall News Messenger Top Cars
GMC Sierra 1500,8 Cylinder, Standard Pickup Truck...(more) 
Chevrolet Impala,6 Cylinder, Large Car...(more) 
Mazda MPV,3.0L DOHC 24V V6 Duratec that produces 200 hp and lb. ft. of torque, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more) 
Chevrolet Impala,3.4L V6 12V, Large Car...(more) 
Saturn Outlook,3.6L V6 24V MPFI DOHC, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more) 
Saab 9-7X,5.3L V8 16V MPFI OHV, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more) 
Cadillac SRX,3.6L V6 24V MPFI DOHC, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more) 
Toyota Highlander,3.3L V6 24V MPFI DOHC, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more) 
-View All Top Cars-
-Place an Ad-
 

Marshall News | Marshall Weather | Sports | Lifestyle | Business News | Opinions | Classifieds | Sitemap
Marshall Cars | Marshall Real Estate | Marshall Jobs

Copyright 2008 Marshall News Messenger. All rights reserved.

By using this service, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement and privacy policy.
Registered site users, you may edit your profile.