February 11, 2008

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Diallel

Many times for certain problems unresolved, we use the expression "The whiting that bites its tail," or "vicious circle" and basically recognized for what falls under the definition set. A good example would be:

Whiting "Put the bag because investors are scared and frightened investors because it lowers the bag."

This kind of circular arguments are called "Diallel" and should add it to your dictionary of words pedantic.

The other day, the chairman of the Federal Reserve said it Philadelphi downhill rates are useless against recession when the real problem is the inability or unwillingness of banks to lend money. What we do not know is if banks fail to lend money by the uncertainty created by central banks. Will it be another "Diallel"?

By contrast, in Five Days tell us that the banking dispute that it toughened the requirements for obtaining a loan.

Financial institutions claim that they do not are tightening the conditions for the provision to companies and individuals. The economic slowdown has not made the banking fluctuate within a maximum of mortgages or the percentage of the property that fund, though it has provoked a 'break' in the demand for credit.

I do not understand, among the list of reasons justifying the break between the first real estate always was that the bank had closed the tap. According Emilio Botín: 'We are keen to give credit to everyone. Just ask solvency. " Maybe the difference is that now added that "We only ask solvency" for dismissal that before did not. Although if we've survived, it might be time to think that we can draw some benefit from all this, as well as discussed in the Country: A crisis, an opportunity.

There is an ill wind that blows nobody any good, says popular wisdom. And this is the position of many analysts before the crisis caused by the tensions of credit and sub-prime mortgages in the U.S. (subprime), as well as before the fraud case at the French bank Societe Generale. In his opinion, these blows could build from now on the implementation of long-term strategies and an awareness of business risks at the international level.

The real estate crisis every day more concerned, because the latest data tell us that a 20% drop in demand for housing tumbaría 180,000 jobs, according to Industry.

Speaking of crises, comes to mind the situation of U.S. and the classic "When the U.S. sneezes Europe get colds," there are some who cast doubt on that assertion, concretamentre Simon Johnson, economic adviser and director of the department of the IMF analysis.

The MIT professor, an expert in the financial sector and the crisis, believes there is a degree of decoupling of economies and that while the slowdown in the U.S. has reached Europe, the euro-zone inflation is a problem more serious than in America.

This crisis has put into question the theory of uneven (Decoupling) of economies. Or what is equal, that the crisis is not passed at all.

Interestingly, having to rethink certain economic dogmas. Will Europe come to its economic maturity and no longer as dependent on U.S.?

Written by Carlos Lopez on February 11, 2008 with 196 reviews
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