That's right. The average increase was $8 billion over five years, but it exploded to $18 billion just prior to that fateful day. None other than a Federal Reserve economist discovered this and was promptly fired for his efforts to reveal the cause. The official story involves an Argentine currency crisis. Clearly, this required his termination. We interviewed him, and this is his story at 2:49 in:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8Z2kiAoCjs&list=PLdaYcumF-5RqlcvcVJkOtnYkgJhzzsed_
We also discuss shipments of cash to Afghanistan and Iraq. And, Justine Underhill explains just who Benny's money-printing IOER profligacy is actually benefitting (answer: foreign banks, a topic covered on Zero Hedge here and by us at EPJ here).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=J8Z2kiAoCjs&t=584
Finally, in case you missed it, we interviewed Steve Keen last week, and at 2:54 he breaks down the difference between different economic religions (the neoclassical school, Keynseyian, post-Keynseyian and other oft-conflated economic taxonomies). We also discuss the role of banks (5:55), whether we have true capitalism (6:20), the crisis of confidence in the US Dollar (8:20), the Fed's rescue of debtors, not creditors (9:40), how stock margin debt drives stock prices (10:20), and why it's all about the leverage (liquidity?) at 11:05.
At 19:57, we debate him on the merrits of the mortgage jubilee.
Here's the interview:
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