“Why Are Global Economies So Closely Interconnected?”

How in the world does sudden fear over a US recession lead to a crash in Japanese stocks? Even more important, what might that crash suggest about the US recession? Our world is more interconnected than you’ve been led to believe. Our entire economic worldview is oriented around national groupings not because that’s the way the world works but because it keeps central bankers in a job. What globally synchronized is telling us now is that job losses are going to painfully rise – ours, not theirs.

Eurodollar University’s Money & Macro Analysis

Bank of Japan New Procedures for Money Market Operations and Monetary Easing
https://www.boj.or.jp/en/mopo/mpmdeci/mpr_2001/k010319a.htm

World Bank Research Paper Global Recessions
https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/185391583249079464/pdf/Global-Recessions.pdf

https://www.eurodollar.university
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JeffSnider_EDU

21 Comments

  1. This recession is most likely the result of an external factor. For the first time in decades, the United States is losing its clout as a federal reserve currency. They don't have any more economies to use to control inflation, and less money is being spent on stock and oil trading than in the past. They all lend support to the idea that a new multilateral world order is in the works.

  2. As recession mount on Wall Street and inflation remains well above the Fed's 2% target, some economics sounded off on just how bad this downturn might be — and how far stocks may have to fall. I need ideas and advice on what investments to make to set myself up for retirement, my goal is to have a portfolio of at least $850k at the age of 60.

  3. IMF (International Monetary Fund) is the Head of the Global Empire. All governments without exception, left or right, are its servants. Everything is a charade. Period.

  4. Well, its so obvious that things are not improving. I'm looking at high-yield dividend stocks. Selling 200k worth of equities is stupid without reinvesting it. I might turn to cash soon if I don't invest it. Any particulars? (Buying bonds or CDs is not for me)