US will beat UK and Europe out of Crunch
The American investment bank Goldman Sachs, which is currently enjoying a “flight to quality” in its business, believes that America will lead Britain and Europe out of the credit crunch.
In many ways that’s a statement of the obvious since the U.S. economy is usually nine months to a year ahead of its transatlantic rivals/partners. And whereas Ben Bernanke at the FED and the Government in Washington have pulled out all the stops to limit the damage, Britain and the eurozone have been slow to react and have concentrated their fire on the dangers of inflation.
David Viniar, Chief Financial Officer at Goldman’s said, “March was the low point up until now, but if I try and predict the future, I am likely to be wrong.
“Do I think we are through? No, I don’t, but I think there is a lot behind us. Now there is less concern about systemic liquidity risk. People are focused individual investments and credit.”
The real danger now appears to be inflation, driven by oil and food prices. That would be reduced by a worldwide downturn. Experience tells us though, that once inflation sets in, it’s a long hard slog to get rid of it, simply because the remedy is recession itself.


George Soros, the man who famously “broke the Bank of England” in 1992, has given an interesting interview to a British newspaper.
A version of this article appeared in
In the U.S. and Britain a recession is defined as when the data records two consecutive quarters of negative growth. So we can only call it a recession when we’re six months in — and then it’s usually already over.