The Michael Hudson Series – Part 1 – The Housing Market


Prof. Michael Hudson gives an eight part series on the global economic crisis. Views you will not get in the mainstream.

14 Comments

  1. LastReplaySC says:

    @yawnballsscratch they rather pump up the bubble and give away cheap money to the investment banks rather then scrubbing the debt. otherwise the ponsy sceme would collaps and we dont want the public to actually become debt-free! That would tottaly fuck up thier RACKET, wouldn’t it now. no debt no money because effectivly the only thing that is backing money is to be paid future DEBT.

  2. LastReplaySC says:

    in germany if you hold the building for at least 3 years you dont pay speculation taxes, with other word property gamblers don’t pay taxes they dont realy invest in the buildings, and only in repairs that are all tax deductable and labled as property investment. its a pyramid sceme where building are falling apart with tenant in them and ever 3 years some one does a paintjob….. or replaces some brocken pipework …….. they are falling appart and are totally overvalued

  3. MrMortgage1 says:

    so many people foreclose without realising they have other options. In many cases refinancing can save not just your home but also your credit rating and your self respect.

    therefinanceunit . com

    is not affiliated with a broker or lender. It’s an information and education resource to help people avoid foreclosure.

    If you’re in financial trouble, check it out – the future may be brighter than you think!

  4. CusterFlux says:

    Excellent Interview! Thanks – some production notes:

    Lighting – nice soft 3K’s good, but a little too flat, and where’s the kicker? You gotta back light.

    Black background is ok, but either go all black, or do some very dim cool blue stuff in the back, I know it’s a cliche, but it works.

  5. goatman257 says:

    Hudson is doing a great job, Keep up the good work.

  6. yawnballsscratch says:

    I remember children watching LiveAid on Christmas Day and being so upset that they gave over their pocket money. While the banks sat back and jacked up interest rates, with Volcker’s blessing, reaping huge profits from thin air, and watching human beings starve to death.

    To this day they refuse to write off the debt.

    To be a banker or a politician truly means selling one’s soul to the Devil.

    Money is just a concept people need to mentally free themselves from these fictitious chains

  7. dilbertgeg says:

    – Without govt intervention, banks will merely hide behind their charters, the central bank, the BIS and Basel II
    —-
    AGREED.

    The banks staff both sides of the regulatory table. We never should have let all these parasites take over via corporate rights, and I don’t mean welfare moms getting $100.

  8. yawnballsscratch says:

    Yes and no: you’re correct that it is the banks who hold the debt. But the government are the only body who can force them to write off the debt, either by allowing them to go bankrupt (which they should have done), or by legislating an amednment to the banking charters that they have grant to the banks.

    Without govt intervention, banks will merely hide behind their charters, the central bank, the BIS and Basel II, stating that they are not permitted to write off the debt.

  9. dilbertgeg says:

    you said:
    The govt should write-off the debt, just as they should have done with the 3rd World.

    you mean:
    The Banks should write-off the debt, just as they should have done with the 3rd World.

    or the govt should step back and make them, while shoring up PENSIONS instead of CEO salaries

  10. yawnballsscratch says:

    dilbertgeg, agreed. It’s now gone full circle – there are plenty of “good homes” in Michigan back for sale @ $10,000 now. Only problem is, the $ trillions of debt still attached to them.

    They govt should write-off the debt, just as they should have done with the 3rd World.

    So, no hope in hell of that happening, just as it didn’t in the 3rd World…

  11. dilbertgeg says:

    Land went up exponentially AS THE RESULT OF PRESSURE OF CHEAP CREDIT for buyers and mortgage investors, people making a fast buck off property, creating crisis of high home prices & high living costs, leading not to prosperity but to *DEBT PEONAGE* for vast majority.

    Good homes valued @ $10,000 in 60s inflated many times over decades, as wages flattened or declined. Total value of the housing market doubled from 2000 to 2007.

    Poor peoples’ lobbyists did not orchestrate this situation.

  12. AlcyoneMagi says:

    Thank-God someone is giving this brilliant man video time and place.

  13. siddhaam says:

    this man knows his stuff.

  14. nickglais says:

    thanks for publishing this

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