Addison Wiggin

Addison Wiggin
Occupation Financial writer, publisher
Language English
Nationality American
Alma mater St. John's College
Notable works Empire of Debt, I.O.U.S.A.

Addison Wiggin is an American financial writer, publisher, and filmmaker. He is executive publisher of Agora Financial, LLC and is a New York Times bestselling author.[1][2]

Financial writing and analysis

Wiggin has asserted that private investment, not government funding, is the crucial factor in advancing economic recovery.[3]

In a 2005 article for The New York Times Magazine, Stephen Metcalf described Wiggin as bullish on gold and critical of the Federal Reserve and American indebtedness:[4]

The narrative Wiggin spun out for me over lunch is repeated, nearly verbatim, by almost everyone in the gold community. "This is the blow-off phase for the Great Dollar Era. We're in an unsustainable trend right now," Wiggin told me, ticking off the miscalculations that have brought us to the brink of an economic apocalypse. To begin with, the U.S. has become the world's biggest debtor, with three outstanding obligations at alarming highs: consumer debt, or our mortgages and credit cards; the federal deficit; and our current account deficit with foreign countries. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, Wiggin continued, has simply shifted one bubble -- the 90's bubble in stocks and bonds -- into another, in real estate and "overconsumption," or the American propensity to pay for an ever-more-lavish lifestyle on credit.

In a June 2011 interview with America's Radio News, Wiggin expressed concern about a series of asset bubbles and related trends in government spending.

...The financial markets in 2001 and 2002 got crushed because of the dot-com bubble, and then we saw that again in 2006 and 2007. Expected revenues from rising house prices never materialized, because the housing market fell apart. The country is addicted to these asset bubbles. And politicians, while making their budgets—it happens at all levels, at state, local, federal and with all the agencies—they kind of plan the spending based on anticipated revenues from these rising asset bubbles. But when the asset bubbles fall apart, when the housing bubble crashes, and when the stock market goes down, those revenues never materialize, but the spending continues.[5]

Publishing work at Agora

In his role at Agora Financial, a subsidiary of Agora Inc., Wiggin is editorial director of publications such as The Daily Reckoning and 5-Minute Forecast, and several financial newsletters including Outstanding Investments and Capital & Crisis.[6]

Documentary film

Another Agora Inc. subsidiary, Agora Entertainment, was created to finance the production of I.O.U.S.A., a feature-length documentary film directed by Patrick Creadon. Wiggin served as executive producer of the film and co-authored a companion book of the same title with Kate Incontrera.[7] The documentary was entered in the Sundance Film Festival in 2008.[8] Film critic Roger Ebert named I.O.U.S.A. one of the top five documentary films of 2008.[9]

Books

Notes

  1. Kaul, Vivek. "We’re reflating a bust bubble." Daily News & Analysis India. October 26, 2009.
  2. "Hardcover Nonfiction." Best-Seller Lists. New York Times. December 11, 2005.
  3. Jonsson, Patrik. "Obama's New Deal is on a smaller scale." The Christian Science Monitor. March 12, 2009.
  4. Metcalf, Stephen. "Believing (and Believing and Believing) in Bullion." The New York Times Magazine. June 5, 2005.
  5. "Debt: America’s Bi-Partisan Blame Game." America’s Radio News. June 11, 2011. Republished by Business Insider.
  6. "Addison Wiggin: Great Expectations." Forbes.com.
  7. Ahrens, Frank. "Indebted Ever After." Washington Post. August 7, 2008.
  8. "I.O.U.S.A." Sundance Institute Archives.
  9. Ebert, Roger. "The best films of 2008... and there were a lot of them." Chicago Sun-Times. December 5, 2008.
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