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I think what it all reflects is that whenever you let the financial and monetary system leave the real economy behind by running off and doing its own thing - speculating, creating and trading "risk management", speculating some more, trading for its own accounts, arbitraging the "noise" in the markets, etc. - you end up with a financial and banking crisis. Because any and all financial instruments must, in the final analysis, be paid for from the physical production of the real economy. Think of financial instruments as claims for payment. When there is a roughly 1.5 to 1 ratio, things are relatively sane. But when you get to where we are today, where there are $60 in claims of payment to every $1 in GDP, there is bound to be a "hiccup."
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