Monthly Archives: June 2015

BIS Highly Critical of Global Financial Policy

BIS Highly Critical of Global Financial Policy

Click Here To Read More.
Get your Free 2024 Special Report


The Bank of International Settlements (BIS) has published its annual report for 2015, and specifically criticizes the current low interest rate policies of central banks worldwide. Known as the “central bank of central banks,” the BIS stated that now there is simply nowhere to go for the world’s largest financial(…)

Read More

44.5% of U.S. Social Security Claimants Overpaid

44.5 of U.S. Social Security Claimants Overpaid

The Social Security Administration (SSA) Inspector General (IG) published a report on June 4, stating that a “review of 1,532 beneficiaries in current pay status as of October 2003…. found that over a 10-year period (from October 2003 through February 2014), SSA assessed overpayments for 44.5 percent of sampled beneficiaries.”(…)

Read More

U.S. Trade Deficit Inflicts Worst Damage on GDP for 30 Years

U.S. Trade Deficit Inflicts Worst Damage on GDP for 30 Years

The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) today released their third (and final) estimate for the rate of U.S. economic growth during the first quarter of this year. Whilst the economy still contracted, the BEA has revised (again) the rate of this contraction, putting growth at -0.2%. Alarmingly, their report highlights(…)

Read More

CBO’s Budget Outlook Highlights Fed Debt

CBO’s Budget Outlook Highlights Fed Debt

In mid-June, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) published its “2015 Long-Term Budget Outlook” and it makes for disturbing reading. According to the CBO, deficits, which are federal debts held by the public, are equivalent to 74% of U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP); this is at its highest level since World(…)

Read More

Obamacare: The Missing $3 Billion

Obamacare The Missing 3 Billion

Around $3 billion of taxpayer money has been lost from the Obamacare system as payments have been made either to the wrong people or overpaid to the correct ones. “The internal control deficiencies that we identified limited (the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) CMS’s ability to make accurate payments,”(…)

Read More

Chinese “Yuan” Seeks IMF Reserve Currency Status

Chinese “Yuan” Seeks IMF Reserve Currency Status

As part of China’s plan to open up their financial markets on a global scale, members of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are currently there to assess the suitability of the Chinese yuan (or renminbi – the people’s currency) to become one of the world’s reserve currencies. Last week, the(…)

Read More

Disney Staff Forced to Train “Cheap” Replacements

Disney Staff Forced to Train “Cheap” Replacements

All over America, corporations are firing staff and replacing them with “cheaper” workers, particularly in the area of information technology. Furthermore, these staff are being forced to train their replacements prior to unemployment – refusal to do so threatens their expected severance pay. A clear example of this, as recently(…)

Read More

What is Congress Doing about the TSA?

What is Congress Doing about the TSA

This week, the Department of Homeland Security Inspector General released a second Transportation Security Administration (TSA) inspection report concerning the latter’s failure to properly background-check 73 individuals with clear “ties to terrorism”. This resulted in the 73 being given employment at various U.S. airports, some with major airlines. Following on(…)

Read More

Corinthian Students Request $200M of Loan Forgiveness

Corinthian Students Request $200M of Loan Forgiveness

Three weeks ago, Corinthian Colleges, one of the largest for-profit U.S. educational institutions, was forced to close all of its campuses because of bankruptcy, leaving 78,000 students out in the cold and the government with $200 million of federal student loan debt. Because the government forced Corinthian’s closure, the students(…)

Read More

State of U.S. Economy Concerns IMF

State of U.S. Economy Concerns IMF

Late last week, it was revealed that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had serious concerns regarding the U.S. economy and the “over-appreciation” of the dollar. The IMF’s Managing Director, Christine Lagarde, spoke of a lack of “tangible signs of wage or price inflation” and “pockets of vulnerability” within the economy(…)

Read More