Part 12/14:
This ongoing crisis has layers of complexity largely hidden from public understanding. Its effects predispose a future where low interest rates, currency devaluations, and systemic fragility dominate economic policy.
The Long Shadow of 2008 in Today’s Economy
The key takeaway is that we are still living in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis, not as a financial bubble burst but as a monetary meltdown. As interest rates have continued to decline, and central banks engage in unprecedented actions, these are signals—and perhaps even confirmation—that the systemic issues rooted in 2008 remain unresolved.