Final Word from Friday, October 31, 2008



In interviews on Aktualne.cz and TV Prima, Václav Klaus said it isn't entirely accurate to compare the current financial crisis to the Great Depression. The 1929 crisis didn't derive from the mortgage sector, he said. More to the point, he argued, is the crisis in the U.S. of 1871. What he didn't mention is that the crisis hit the Austro-Hungarian Empire - of which Bohemia was a part - in full force by 1873. The Central Bank Act of 1862 was suspended, allowing the bank to print money to increase liquidity. A major mortgage bank (Bodencreditanstalt) with a credit rating equal to the monarchy's had to be rescued because it was involved in risky stock transactions. The Vienna Stock Exchange crashed. An industrial expansion that was taking hold came to a complete halt. And, as Klaus correctly indicated, it was all because of a building boom that pushed property values ever higher, until it became clear that assumptions about economic growth were much too optimistic. Time for Topolánek's ministers to crack open their history books.[Czech Republic Boden-Creditanstalt real estate construction]

Glossary of difficult words

Panic of 1873 - the crisis Klaus spoke of is usually referred to as the Panic of 1873;

to derive from - to arise from or originate in;

to take hold - to start to have an effect;

to crack a book - to open a book and read it; to study.

Contact

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E-mail: info@fleet.cz

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170 00 Prague 7
Czech Republic

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