psytrade - nice reference (Night of the Living Fed). From pg 16:
Very Brief Recommendations
1) Emphasize U.S. quality companies, which are still cheap in an overpriced world.
2) Moderately overweight emerging market equities.
3) Moderately underweight the balance of global equities.
4) Heavily underweight lower quality U.S. companies.
5) Carry extra cash reserves for a volatile market with insecure fundamentals.
6) For the very long term (20 years) overweight resources, particularly if they have a sharp decline. (This is my
personal view rather than that of GMO, which on this topic is agnostic.)
read more here:
http://www.gmo.com/websitecontent/JGLetter_NightofLivingFed_3Q10.pdf
Fareed Zhacharia interviewed China's Premier Wen Jaibao in early October. Wen Jaiboa stated that the Chinese stimulus package was ~ 10 x the size of the US stimulus (measured as a % of Chinese GDP). Clearly China is also captive to the bilateral relationship it has with the US.
Capitalism always acts in it's own best interests. America evolved from being a colony into a super power due to the drive of its citizenry, the availability of abundant resources, and cheap energy. The interests of American wealth seem to have significantly diverged from the American nation.
I'm not a fan of Lester Thurow. Judging by all the zero sum references, I suspect many here are familiar with his writtings. In "The Future of Capitalism" (1996) he outlined elements of the dynamic currently in play. The political class and the servants of the wealthy are doing their best to band aid America's aorta.
The path of least resistance is always down.