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Did Iraq war cause the credit crunch?

Joseph Stiglitz A new book by Nobel prizewinning economist Joseph Stiglitz tracks the effect that the war in Iraq has had on the American economy. The Three Trillion Dollar War — The True Cost Of The Iraq Conflict outlines the immense downside across the globe of this policy.

In terms of the current credit crunch, which arose out the sub-prime mortgage fiasco, many had blamed Alan Greenspan, then Chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank, for keeping rates too low for too long. Combined with steeply rising house prices this gave the banks a one-way bet for lending to the trailer-park poor.

However, it’s clear from Stiglitz’s book that the low rate regime was engineered to mask the terrifying cost to the American economy of the wars in the Middle East.

We can now see the extent of the disaster to American interests the war is continuing to cause. The conflicts have led to a strengthening of Gulf, Chinese and other sovereign wealth funds which have bought up large chunks of prime U.S. assets, including blue-chip bank stock, while, in some cases, simultaneously enjoying a bonanza from higher and higher oil prices.

In ten years these bank stocks should prove exceptionally rich investments as they recover from current adverse credit conditions. The war has given them a one-way bet.

Joseph Stiglitz works out the numbers and they make depressing reading.

The American economy is now in recession. A slew of new data clearly reveals both a marked slowdown in activity, combined with a rise in inflation — something not seen since the stubborn “stagflation” period of the 1970s.

Despite all this, some economists expect a robust return to growth later in the year off the back of aggressive rate cuts by the Fed and a financial package from the President that will see checks delivered to taxpayers, and others on low incomes, by June.

We shall see.

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