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Dr. Marc Faber
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“I think the regimes will try to keep the system alive as it is for as long as possible, which means there’s no “fiscal cliff,” there’s a fiscal grand canyon,” Faber told CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
Faber argued that
the political systems in place in the West would allow the debt burden
to continue to expand. Under such a scenario of never-ending deficits,
the Western world would rack up huge deficits.
One day, the system would break, he said.
“Eventually, you have either huge changes
occurring in a peaceful fashion through reforms, or, usually, through
revolutions,” he said. The U.S. is getting closer to such a revolution,
he said, as is Europe.
“I think the timeframe would be within five to
ten years you have a colossal mess … everywhere in the Western world,”
Faber said. “I think the deficit here (in the U.S.) — irrespective of
who is in the White House — will stay above a trillion dollars per
annum for at least as far as the eye can see.”
Bureaucracies in the U.S., as well as Europe, are far too big, he said, and are a burden on the economy.
“My medicine for the U.S. is: Reduce government by minimum 50 percent,” he said.
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