Link Love: Recessed But Not Depressed edition
Posted by Lise on 14 Mar 2008 at 11:50 am | Tagged as: economics, meta, personal development, personal finance
Bankrate.com presents Market History: Learning What to Do From Past Recessions. Everything old is new again, as Bankrate discusses the history of oil prices, real estate bubbles, gold, and foreign investments. I wish they had brought up what Money mentioned last month: that over the past 100 years, stocks have consistently outperformed gold. That’s advice that some people I know desperately need right now.
Delayed, but good: Robert Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor, writes about The Real Recession Problem: Consumers Are At the End of Their Ropes (h/t to Brian). We’re finally reaping the whirlwind of widening inequality and ever more concentrated wealth, he writes, acknowledging that there is more to this financial situation than just “HOMG yuppies bought bigger houses than they could afford!” This makes him rare among American finance writers I’ve encountered, who seem to ignore the social inequalities in how sub-prime mortgages were sold to minority and immigrant families by shady lenders. (The BBC’s The U.S. Subprime Crisis in Graphics in another good resource).
On a lighter note, I’ve discovered the new-ish Retirement: A Full-Time Job blog. I, too, aspire to be a “young retired bitch.”
Leo writes about The Magical Power of Focus and reminds me that- ooh, shiny!
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I’ve always liked Robert Reich… the man may look like a hobbit, but he speaks sense.