They told us so…
A few who predicted our current state of affairs
tell us what they see coming next
NEW YORK - July 20, 2008
“We are now the largest debtor
nation in the history of the world. We owe $13 trillion, and we get $1 trillion
further into debt every fifteen months. That’s the world giving up on America.”
—Jim Rogers, investor, who has predicted a stock market fall
and commodities boom
“The house next to mine in
Florida sold for $105,000 in 1998, $765,000 seven years later. My guess is that
it may more properly be worth around $275,000. Getting from $765,000 to
$275,000, if it happens, is going to involve a lot of pain.”
—Andrew Tobias, investment guru, who has warned of a bursting
real-estate bubble since 2002
“The American consumer is
toast. We’re talking a multiyear adjustment, at least two or three years, maybe
more. Does that mean America is over? Does that mean we have a whole new world
order? The jury’s out on that.”
—Stephen Roach, former chief economist at Morgan Stanley, who
in 2004 warned of an impending economic Armageddon
“I think we are maybe 10 percent into this crisis. The
economic distortions have been building for longer than we’ve seen in the
history of the world. Never have we had such confidence falsely placed in a
reserve currency.”
—Ron Paul, former presidential candidate, who advocates a
return to the gold standard