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An Interesting Question…Didn’t They See This Coming?

Posted by admin on September 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment 

Our government is in high panic mode trying to fix the current financial crunch that we are in.  I am just wondering why no one saw this coming.  It only makes sense that we have been pouring out Trillions of dollars on fighting terrorism and the war and we have been doing this for the past 7 years.  It only stands to reason that over time we are slowly but surely going broke.  Honestly, if you look at things however, this really was coming to this point before September 11, 2001.  If you look at the trends in banking and in the economy, you can honestly see that interest on bank accounts took a nose dive around the mid 90′s.  Back in 1989, your interest on an average checking account was 5.14% and an average savings account was 5.5%.  Money markets and CD’s went up to on the average about 8-9% depending of course on the term.  Now you are lucky if you are getting about 1% interest on your savings.  This decline started before all this terrorism stuff came to a head.  Didn’t they see this was happening? Didn’t we? I guess I just think that better financial planning could have gone into this.  It is like our government has bounced a million checks in the past week and they are scrambling to figure out where they are going to get the money from quickly.  I just would like to think that our government had a better handle on their finances than this.  It really just seems to me that they could have planned ahead and seen this coming.  I guess with credit card companies charging exorbitant fees and banks charging equally exorbitant fees and interest rates, it seems to me that they would be doing well, but I guess not, which in essence means that the money that we think we have in the banks is really gone.  I am sure in this financial whirlwind that we are in, if we all went to the banks and tried to get our money out, our government would be in quite a pickle.  In any case, I really think that someone ought to be held accountable as this problem didn’t just happen over night, and it probably won’t be fixed over night either.

Filed under Debt · Tagged with 2001, 7 years, bank accounts, better financial planning, CDs, charging exorbitant fees, checking account, credit card, credit card companies, current financial crunch, economy, fighting terrorism, financial crunch, high panic mode, interest, interest on bank accounts, interest rates, money markets, savings, savings account, September 11, the war, trends in banking, trillions of dollars, war

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