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Economic slump : Global trust in business plummeted in 2008

DerekLeung

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Global trust in business plummeted in 2008:

Tue Jan 27, 2009 4:18am EST

By Scott Malone

BOSTON (Reuters) - Trust in business plummeted worldwide last year, as the global economic crisis sent financial institutions pleading for government support, leaving average people to question industry's ability to bring prosperity, according to a survey released on Tuesday.

Some 62 percent of informed adults aged 25 to 64 told the Edelman Trust Barometer that they trusted businesses less than they had a year ago, with respondents in the United States and Western Europe more suspicious than those in emerging economies.

The biggest drops came in Ireland, where 83 percent of respondents said they had lost trust in business; in Japan, where 79 percent grew more wary; and in the United States, where 77 percent became more suspicious.

Trust evaporated as the world's most severe economic crisis since the Great Depression caused millions to lose their jobs and wiped out billions of dollars of invested capital.

"This is not 2001-2003; this is not limited to the dot-com New Economy concept companies ... This is General Motors; this is your big bank," said Richard Edelman, president and chief executive of U.S. public relations firm Edelman, which commissioned the survey. "It's affected you in the pocketbook and also it's been the mainstays of the economy."

Last year a downturn that started with investors losing confidence in obscure securities from the U.S. mortgage market snowballed, pushing Wall Street banks including Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc to their knees and even bringing the North Atlantic nation of Iceland to the brink of bankruptcy.

In the United States, just 38 percent of respondents aged 35 to 64 said they trusted business, down from 58 percent a year earlier and the lowest rating in the survey's 10-year history. The reading is lower even than results in the wake of the dot-com bust and collapse of Enron Corp.

While the survey has been conducted for 10 years, this is the first time questioners have specifically asked whether their trust in business had declined over the past year. The survey has grown to include more countries and a wider age range of respondents over its history.

SUSPICIOUS EYE Toward BANKS, CARMAKERS

Americans were least trusting of the auto and banking industries -- both of which last year turned to Washington for billions of dollars to tide them through financial crises.

The U.S. government has already paid out more than $270 billion through its Troubled Asset Relief Program to prop up financial institutions including Bank of America Corp, Citigroup and American International Group, and has made multibillion-dollar loans to automakers General Motors Corp and Chrysler LLC.

Respondents in emerging economies were the least likely to say they had their confidence in business shaken.

Just 21 percent of Brazilians said they had lost confidence in business last year, while 32 percent of Indonesians grew more doubtful and 49 percent of Indians and Russians reported a loss of faith in business.

"In the developing world the consensus would be: 'Business has brought us prosperity,' and I think America would be in that camp until this year, until Madoff and Lehman Brothers," said Edelman, referring to the disgraced money manager who is accused of running a $50 billion fraud. "America has now moved into the realm of business skeptics."

Still, unease with business could spread to the developing world as large corporate scandals begin to erupt there, he noted, saying: "I wonder if we did the study today in India how optimistic they would be after Satyam." Continued...
 
Global trust in business plummeted in 2008:

Tue Jan 27, 2009 4:18am EST

By Scott Malone

BOSTON (Reuters) - Trust in business plummeted worldwide last year, as the global economic crisis sent financial institutions pleading for government support, leaving average people to question industry's ability to bring prosperity, according to a survey released on Tuesday.

Some 62 percent of informed adults aged 25 to 64 told the Edelman Trust Barometer that they trusted businesses less than they had a year ago, with respondents in the United States and Western Europe more suspicious than those in emerging economies.

The biggest drops came in Ireland, where 83 percent of respondents said they had lost trust in business; in Japan, where 79 percent grew more wary; and in the United States, where 77 percent became more suspicious.

Trust evaporated as the world's most severe economic crisis since the Great Depression caused millions to lose their jobs and wiped out billions of dollars of invested capital.

"This is not 2001-2003; this is not limited to the dot-com New Economy concept companies ... This is General Motors; this is your big bank," said Richard Edelman, president and chief executive of U.S. public relations firm Edelman, which commissioned the survey. "It's affected you in the pocketbook and also it's been the mainstays of the economy."

Last year a downturn that started with investors losing confidence in obscure securities from the U.S. mortgage market snowballed, pushing Wall Street banks including Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc to their knees and even bringing the North Atlantic nation of Iceland to the brink of bankruptcy.

In the United States, just 38 percent of respondents aged 35 to 64 said they trusted business, down from 58 percent a year earlier and the lowest rating in the survey's 10-year history. The reading is lower even than results in the wake of the dot-com bust and collapse of Enron Corp.

While the survey has been conducted for 10 years, this is the first time questioners have specifically asked whether their trust in business had declined over the past year. The survey has grown to include more countries and a wider age range of respondents over its history.

SUSPICIOUS EYE Toward BANKS, CARMAKERS

Americans were least trusting of the auto and banking industries -- both of which last year turned to Washington for billions of dollars to tide them through financial crises.

The U.S. government has already paid out more than $270 billion through its Troubled Asset Relief Program to prop up financial institutions including Bank of America Corp, Citigroup and American International Group, and has made multibillion-dollar loans to automakers General Motors Corp and Chrysler LLC.

Respondents in emerging economies were the least likely to say they had their confidence in business shaken.

Just 21 percent of Brazilians said they had lost confidence in business last year, while 32 percent of Indonesians grew more doubtful and 49 percent of Indians and Russians reported a loss of faith in business.

"In the developing world the consensus would be: 'Business has brought us prosperity,' and I think America would be in that camp until this year, until Madoff and Lehman Brothers," said Edelman, referring to the disgraced money manager who is accused of running a $50 billion fraud. "America has now moved into the realm of business skeptics."

Still, unease with business could spread to the developing world as large corporate scandals begin to erupt there, he noted, saying: "I wonder if we did the study today in India how optimistic they would be after Satyam." Continued...
Expect more MNCs, specially global financial institutions, to announce massive layoffs in The Year Of The Ox!

Expect many gov'ts around the world to collapse due to financial stress in the years ahead! First gov't to collapse was Iceland.

Next gov't to collapse? Perhaps Greece or Latvia.
 
The Coming Financial Collapse

by William Frederick on Mon Jun 02, 2008 10:58 am
Many economists are saying that the United States is in serious financial trouble and that we are about to enter a severe recession at the least and possibly a depression worse than 1929. If this is indeed the case is there anything that we can do about it? Yes I believe that we can and I will post links to good articles dealing with this issue. Here is a good one outlining the problems and offering a suggestion as to what we can do about it.

http://www.theinternationalforecaster.com/International_Forecaster_Weekly/Wall_of_Worries/

Also how does a financial collapse fit into end times Bible prophecy? The Bible predicts that there will be a worldwide financial collapse, this collapse is found in Revelation 6:5,6.

And when he had opened the third seal, I heard the third beast say, Come and see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand. 6. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine.

When this seal is opened scripture tells us that it will take a whole days wages to buy a measure of wheat. This is a financial collapse! Are we at this point now? For us to be at this point now would mean that we were already in the 70th week and that seal 1 and 2 were already opened. From my study of scripture I do not believe this to be the case but more likely I see the present economic distress around the world as a planned catalyst to form the world into 10 economic, and eventual political, regions. Europe already is one.
Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ

http://thecomingepiphany.com/prophecychatter/viewtopic.php?f=10&p=41
 
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