Fabrice Grinda

  • Playing with
    Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • AI
    • Pitch me your startup!
    • Fabrice AI
  • IT
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PL
    • PT-BR
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Menu

  • IT
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PL
    • PT-BR
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
  • Home
  • Playing with Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
Salta al contenuto
Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

Mese: Luglio 2009

Whatever Works is a great movie with fantastic dialogue

Whatever Works is a great movie with fantastic dialogue

I admit I was skeptical going in to see the movie. I had seen mixed reviews (46% on rotten tomatoes) and I was not enthused by the idea of yet another Woody Allen Spring/Autumn relationship movie.

Interestingly, within a few minutes the movie drew me in. The dialogue is outstanding – intelligent, quick, funny and frankly inspiring. I left the movie intellectually stimulated. I am convinced the quality, cadence and wit of my oration went through the roof that evening.

The two things that typically would have put me off in the movie actually worked. Larry David was great in the “Woody Allen role”. Seeing Woody Allen play that role would have probably annoyed me. Moreover, his talking to the camera actually works!

People often say the only difference between a Shakespearean comedy and tragedy is the ending because despite all the drama, darkness and intrigue, in one they end up all getting married to each other and in the other they all die. In a way this seems to be becoming true of Woody Allen movies and this one is a Woody Allen comedy. While the dialogue and humor are very dark, the movie is very much a comedy with a light tone and a predictable happy ending provided by New York’s magical capacity to turn people into who they really are.

Go watch it!

P.S. Someone should make a movie with such amazing dialogue with happy, well adjusted, super smart characters, if only to show that intelligence is not necessarily associated with arrogance, pessimism and social aloofness! Then again, maybe the plot would be boring if that was the case 🙂

Autore FabricePubblicato il Luglio 19, 2009Luglio 14, 2023Categorie Film e spettacoli televisivi3 commenti su Whatever Works is a great movie with fantastic dialogue

The Economy: The End of the Beginning…

The Economy: The End of the Beginning…

… but probably not the beginning of the end! It is interesting to see the speed at which sentiment seemingly switches. Last October and in late February and early March of this year, people seemed desperate, believing a new Great Depression was inevitable. The past few months have seen renewed optimism with many suggesting that the economy could recover by the end of the year – which in turn has led many to worry that a pickup in economic growth will lead to massive inflation. All three views are probably wrong.

Not a Great Depression

As expected, the crisis spread from Wall Street to Main Street, but this is not a Great Depression. Between 1929 and 1933, the US economy shrank by a quarter. Real estate prices fell by 50% in 2 years. Retail banks failed. Unemployment reached 25%. Many queued around the block for soup and bread. In New York many who lost their residence found refuge in Central Park.

The unemployment rate is currently 9.5% and the banks that have been most affected by the crisis are the commercial banks rather than the retail banks. Most importantly, the Fed has learned from past mistakes. Overly tight monetary policy turned the downturn into the Great Depression during the 1930s. Ben Bernanke is a scholar of the period and will not let it happen again. The global rate cuts that have been orchestrated by the major global central banks and the sheer size of the fiscal stimuli show policymakers understand the gravity of the situation and are trying to provide appropriate liquidity. I am confident the combined might of all the world’s central banks and governments will prevent the crisis from becoming catastrophic.

While outright deflation might be avoided, the economic headwinds and imbalances remain strong suggesting a slow multi-year recovery

During the early 2000s the Fed and the Treasury did many crisis simulations to see how they would respond to a Japan-like deleveraging and banking crisis. They always responded rapidly and efficiently – lowering interest rates, nationalizing banks, separating good assets from bad, etc. Interestingly enough, when faced with an actual crisis, while often knowing exactly what needs to be done, they have not shown the political will to do quite enough to solve the crisis. Granted, the Treasury and the Fed responded much faster than the Japanese policymakers who took two years to start significantly lowering interest rates and increasing government spending. However, with regards to the banking crisis, the solutions proposed have been haphazard and incomplete. The solution we have opted for, seemingly for fear of political retribution, is to hope that the banks can earn their way out of the problem. The issue with this solution is that, like in Japan, it creates zombie banks which need to retain all of their earnings and does not provide the economy with the credit it needs to function.

Moreover, the solution to the crisis that the administration seems to be hoping for is that people start borrowing again to spend on housing, cars, and consumer goods, and it is therefore pushing policies to promote the buying of cars and houses. The issue here is that this is like offering a heroin addict one last hit before sending him to rehab. You don’t solve a problem of excess leverage but piling on more leverage! That is also true at the country level. The overall level of indebtedness does not change based on whether the debt sits on the balance sheets of individuals, companies, or governments.

The underlying problem of excess leverage can only be solved with increased saving by consumers, greater profits for companies, less spending by governments, and higher tax revenues – ideally driven by productivity growth. As expensive as they were, the large bank bailouts were unavoidable as businesses and consumers need credit to function. The economy cannot operate without an effective banking system, but it’s unclear that we need such a large fiscal stimulus.

The stimulus seems to be motivated by the fact that as a society we no longer seem willing to suffer from short-term pains for longer-term gains. The massive stimulus will ease the short-term pain, but the automatic stabilizers built into such high levels of government debt relative to GDP will probably prevent any real recovery for 5-10 years as they did in Japan over the last 20 years. When growth picks up interest rates will increase as people start fearing inflation. Combined with increased taxes as the government needs to get its fiscal house in order, the crowding out of private investment which is the true long-term driver of growth, and a slew of anti-growth policies, growth will probably be limited to 1-1.5% a year in the recovery. The economy will no longer technically be in a recession, but it won’t feel like recovery, either. In other words, we bought great depression insurance and recession sweeteners at the cost of prolonged economic stagnation!

Inflation is not a short-term concern

It’s interesting to note that if Japanese policymakers had to do it again, they probably would not redo the massive fiscal easing which ultimately left them with little other than a huge pile of debt and an economic speed limit brought about by the aforementioned automatic stabilizers. Given those stabilizers, inflation is unlikely to be a worry in the short term.

Moreover, while the amount of money in circulation has increased significantly, the velocity of money has shrunk dramatically. It is unlikely to recover as the solution we elected for the banking crisis is to hope banks can earn their way out of trouble. With this multiyear solution, banks don’t originate many new loans as they retain their profits to shore up their balance sheets.

Politically, it’s also unclear that the United States can inflate its way out of debt. An angry middle class will probably demand that Congress tighten its purse strings. There was little popular support for the bank bailouts, especially as the crisis was presented as caused by Wall Street. Taxpayers are in no mood to be told that some of what ails the economy is due to their own irresponsibility (see Whodunit?), and that much more of their money is needed both to minimize the pain and to pay for the entitlement promises made to the retiring baby boom generations.

Moreover, China, America’s largest foreign creditor, will strive to protect its dollar assets. As long as China believes that America will eschew an inflationary solution, it will remain in China’s interest to buy the US debt that must fund America’s coming shortfall in tax revenues and the entitlement commitments that stretch for decades. But if America credibly indicates that it will pursue a genuinely inflationary monetary policy, the prospect of massive capital losses on its dollar reserves may cause China to preempt that action. Given how much America now needs China, it is not clear that America could pursue an outright inflationary policy if China acts to prevent it.

Conclusion

We have avoided a Great Depression, but the ill-advised solutions we are implementing to deal with the crisis are setting us up for at least 5-10 years of economic stagnation.

Autore FabricePubblicato il Luglio 7, 2009Ottobre 12, 2023Categorie L'economia5 commenti su The Economy: The End of the Beginning…

Search

Recent Posts

  • Il significato della vita
  • Aggiornamento FJ Labs Q2 2025
  • Conversazione con Auren Hoffman sul mondo DaaS: portafogli diversificati, vendite secondarie e feste a cena
  • Episodio 50: Tendenze del mercato dei capitali di rischio
  • Decodificare il futuro: AI, mercato dei capitali di rischio e mercati

Recent Comments

  • Ahmed Aladdin su The Meaning of Life
  • Ahmed Aladdin su The Meaning of Life
  • Germine Rose su The Meaning of Life
  • Fabrice su 2024: Amélie
  • Michael J su 2024: Amélie

Archives

  • Luglio 2025
  • Giugno 2025
  • Maggio 2025
  • Aprile 2025
  • Marzo 2025
  • Febbraio 2025
  • Gennaio 2025
  • Dicembre 2024
  • Novembre 2024
  • Ottobre 2024
  • Settembre 2024
  • Agosto 2024
  • Luglio 2024
  • Giugno 2024
  • Maggio 2024
  • Aprile 2024
  • Marzo 2024
  • Febbraio 2024
  • Gennaio 2024
  • Dicembre 2023
  • Novembre 2023
  • Ottobre 2023
  • Settembre 2023
  • Agosto 2023
  • Giugno 2023
  • Maggio 2023
  • Aprile 2023
  • Marzo 2023
  • Febbraio 2023
  • Gennaio 2023
  • Dicembre 2022
  • Novembre 2022
  • Ottobre 2022
  • Settembre 2022
  • Agosto 2022
  • Giugno 2022
  • Maggio 2022
  • Aprile 2022
  • Marzo 2022
  • Febbraio 2022
  • Gennaio 2022
  • Novembre 2021
  • Ottobre 2021
  • Settembre 2021
  • Agosto 2021
  • Luglio 2021
  • Giugno 2021
  • Aprile 2021
  • Marzo 2021
  • Febbraio 2021
  • Gennaio 2021
  • Dicembre 2020
  • Novembre 2020
  • Ottobre 2020
  • Settembre 2020
  • Agosto 2020
  • Luglio 2020
  • Giugno 2020
  • Maggio 2020
  • Aprile 2020
  • Marzo 2020
  • Febbraio 2020
  • Gennaio 2020
  • Novembre 2019
  • Ottobre 2019
  • Settembre 2019
  • Agosto 2019
  • Luglio 2019
  • Giugno 2019
  • Aprile 2019
  • Marzo 2019
  • Febbraio 2019
  • Gennaio 2019
  • Dicembre 2018
  • Novembre 2018
  • Ottobre 2018
  • Agosto 2018
  • Giugno 2018
  • Maggio 2018
  • Marzo 2018
  • Febbraio 2018
  • Gennaio 2018
  • Dicembre 2017
  • Novembre 2017
  • Ottobre 2017
  • Settembre 2017
  • Agosto 2017
  • Luglio 2017
  • Giugno 2017
  • Maggio 2017
  • Aprile 2017
  • Marzo 2017
  • Febbraio 2017
  • Gennaio 2017
  • Dicembre 2016
  • Novembre 2016
  • Ottobre 2016
  • Settembre 2016
  • Agosto 2016
  • Luglio 2016
  • Giugno 2016
  • Maggio 2016
  • Aprile 2016
  • Marzo 2016
  • Febbraio 2016
  • Gennaio 2016
  • Dicembre 2015
  • Novembre 2015
  • Settembre 2015
  • Agosto 2015
  • Luglio 2015
  • Giugno 2015
  • Maggio 2015
  • Aprile 2015
  • Marzo 2015
  • Febbraio 2015
  • Gennaio 2015
  • Dicembre 2014
  • Novembre 2014
  • Ottobre 2014
  • Settembre 2014
  • Agosto 2014
  • Luglio 2014
  • Giugno 2014
  • Maggio 2014
  • Aprile 2014
  • Febbraio 2014
  • Gennaio 2014
  • Dicembre 2013
  • Novembre 2013
  • Ottobre 2013
  • Settembre 2013
  • Agosto 2013
  • Luglio 2013
  • Giugno 2013
  • Maggio 2013
  • Aprile 2013
  • Marzo 2013
  • Febbraio 2013
  • Gennaio 2013
  • Dicembre 2012
  • Novembre 2012
  • Ottobre 2012
  • Settembre 2012
  • Agosto 2012
  • Luglio 2012
  • Giugno 2012
  • Maggio 2012
  • Aprile 2012
  • Marzo 2012
  • Febbraio 2012
  • Gennaio 2012
  • Dicembre 2011
  • Novembre 2011
  • Ottobre 2011
  • Settembre 2011
  • Agosto 2011
  • Luglio 2011
  • Giugno 2011
  • Maggio 2011
  • Aprile 2011
  • Marzo 2011
  • Febbraio 2011
  • Gennaio 2011
  • Dicembre 2010
  • Novembre 2010
  • Ottobre 2010
  • Settembre 2010
  • Agosto 2010
  • Luglio 2010
  • Giugno 2010
  • Maggio 2010
  • Aprile 2010
  • Marzo 2010
  • Febbraio 2010
  • Gennaio 2010
  • Dicembre 2009
  • Novembre 2009
  • Ottobre 2009
  • Settembre 2009
  • Agosto 2009
  • Luglio 2009
  • Giugno 2009
  • Maggio 2009
  • Aprile 2009
  • Marzo 2009
  • Febbraio 2009
  • Gennaio 2009
  • Dicembre 2008
  • Novembre 2008
  • Ottobre 2008
  • Settembre 2008
  • Agosto 2008
  • Luglio 2008
  • Giugno 2008
  • Maggio 2008
  • Aprile 2008
  • Marzo 2008
  • Febbraio 2008
  • Gennaio 2008
  • Dicembre 2007
  • Novembre 2007
  • Ottobre 2007
  • Settembre 2007
  • Agosto 2007
  • Luglio 2007
  • Giugno 2007
  • Maggio 2007
  • Aprile 2007
  • Marzo 2007
  • Febbraio 2007
  • Gennaio 2007
  • Dicembre 2006
  • Novembre 2006
  • Ottobre 2006
  • Settembre 2006
  • Agosto 2006
  • Luglio 2006
  • Giugno 2006
  • Maggio 2006
  • Aprile 2006
  • Marzo 2006
  • Febbraio 2006
  • Gennaio 2006
  • Dicembre 2005
  • Novembre 2005

Categories

  • Crittografia/Web3
  • L'economia
  • Mercati
  • Gadget tecnologici
  • Viaggi
  • Articoli in evidenza
  • New York
  • Anno in rassegna
  • Giochi
  • Imprenditorialità
  • Felicità
  • Discorsi
  • OLX
  • Giocare con gli unicorni
  • Laboratori FJ
  • Film e spettacoli televisivi
  • Interviste e chiacchierate al caminetto
  • Riflessioni personali
  • Videogiochi
  • Riflessioni sul mondo degli affari
  • Libri
  • Anno in rassegna
  • Ottimizzazione della vita
  • Laboratori FJ
  • Processo decisionale
  • L'economia
  • Asset Light Living
  • Riflessioni
  • Ottimismo e felicità
  • Cani

Meta

  • Accedi
  • Feed dei contenuti
  • Feed dei commenti
  • WordPress.org
Pitch me your startup!
  • Home
  • Playing with Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

>
This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.