What Schools Will Never Teach You About Money By Robert T. Kiyosaki
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Fin Ed History
After 1971, the U.S. printing presses began to run as the government began using counterfeit dollars to pay for its expenses and debt. Because the United States used a lot of oil, U.S. dollars flowed to Saudi Arabia just as oil prices began to rise. As the price for oil rose, more dollars flowed to the Arab world. These petrodollars, as they were called, had to find a home, so these petrodollars flowed to London, because London had banks big enough to handle such a surge in cash. From London, these dollars again needed a home, so the money flowed to anyone who would borrow these petrodollars. Latin American countries gladly borrowed the money and, in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Latin American economy went into a bubble and burst, causing the Latin American debt crisis. From Latin America, the hot money flowed Chapter Three Unfair Advantage 93 92 new tranches of debt, aka a pile of debt, were called MBSs (Mortgage Backed Securities) and CDOs (Collateralized Debt Obligations), aka derivatives of subprime debt packaged as prime. The biggest banks and Wall Street sold this toxic debt as assets to other banks, pension funds, and investors all over the world. It was not much different than taking horse manure, deodorizing it, putting it in a plastic bag, and selling it as fertilizer. The only difference between a subprime loan and horse manure is that horse manure, used properly, has real value. In chapter one, I wrote that the people with the best financial education in the world are the people who profited from this crisis. They may not have caused the crisis, but they went along with it. Many made millions and a few made billions. They are still at work shoveling horse manure—or buying it. Can’t they smell it? And how could Warren Buffett’s rating company, Moody’s, bless this horse manure as AAA? As the smartest guys in the world began spreading this financial horse manure all over the world, global home prices climbed and millions of people all over the world felt rich. They felt rich due to the wealth effect, which means they felt wealthy because their home had gone up in value—again, they were focusing on capital gains. With an increase in home value, millions mistakenly thought their net worth had gone up. With this feeling of euphoria, they began spending, charging like mad bulls with credit cards, paying off their credit cards by refinancing their homes, and blowing the bubble into a giant hot-air balloon. What makes me sick is that these experts, such as former Fed Chairman Greenspan and current Fed Chairman Bernanke, claim not to have seen the biggest hot-air balloon in history. The following are some of Bernanke’s comments as the balloon began to burst: Download 5.81 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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