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In 1929, Deflation Started in Europe Before Overtaking the U.S.
What Happens in Europe Will Not Stay in Europe
By Bob Stokes
Tue, 09 Oct 2012 17:45:00 ET
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More than 1,500 years after the fact, scholars still debate the causes of the Roman Empire's fall. 

What historians do agree on is that the crumbling empire's final days were marked by economic contraction, a struggle to fund Rome's routine affairs and excessive debt.
 
Sound familiar?
 
Mark Twain said, "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme."
 
That quote seems to apply when economically comparing the Roman Empire and the United States.
 
Today's superpower also faces a mountain of debt and a slow economy.
 
Unlike then, however, the modern economy is global.
 
So an economic downturn in one major area of the globe is likely to affect another. In fact, even during the Great Depression (long before the phrase "global economy"), Europe was exporting to America.
 
But one historic export was not the kind that the U.S. welcomed.
 
The economy is clearly vulnerable to a debilitating wave of debt deflation. The threat is approaching quickly from an important source: Europe. The same sequence of events occurred in 1929, when deflation started overseas before lapping onto U.S. shores.
 
The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, January 2012 
 
The Financial Forecast has long kept a careful eye on the threat Europe's debt crisis poses to the U.S. economy.
 
The economic slowdown that EWFF characterized in January as Europe’s “top export” is finally reaching foreign shores. Several financial news outlets report that the U.S. and China are now “slipping in sync” with Europe.
 
The Financial Forecast, June 2012
 
And recent news registered the economic slowdown.
 
  • Small Businesses Grow Wary; See Fewer Hires -- Reuters, Oct. 9
  • IMF Slashes Forecasts for Global Economic Growth -- CNBC, Oct. 8
  • World Bank Cuts East Asia GDP Outlook, Flags China Risks -- Reuters, Oct. 7
  • Europe’s Richer Regions Want Out -- New York Times, Oct. 7
  • Entrepreneurship is 'weaker than ever' -- CNNMoney, Oct. 5
  • The U.S. unemployment rate tumbled to 7.8% in September but a broader measure was flat at 14.7%. [emphasis added] - Wall Street Journal, Oct. 5
  • Orders to U.S. Factories Plunge -- Bloomberg, Oct. 4
  • Spain's Tax Take Tumbles as Companies Go Abroad -- Reuters, Oct. 3
  • Trade Slows Around World -- Wall Street Journal, Oct. 1 
Indeed, the European Central Bank recently initiated a new bond buying plan, the Bank of Japan just expanded its asset purchase and loan program, and the Federal Reserve announced QE3.
 
But don't count on central bankers to rescue the global economy.
 
Consider what Robert Prechter said in the July 2012 Elliott Wave Theorist:
 
The Fed’s actions are short-term inflationary but are setting up a bigger crash than would happen otherwise.
 
The new October Financial Forecast explains why the Federal Reserve "will pay a steep price for goosing the old trend near its end and for fighting the new trend as it begins."
 

Tags: 1929 Stock Market Crash, debt, deflation, economic depression, economic indicators, Elliott wave, European debt crisis, European Union (EU), history, soverign debt crisis, world central banks
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