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| Tips and Deals ---- 'Friendly' Political Ranting |
| "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: Ted King
Date: June 26, 2012 09:12AM
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What, after all, is the story of this crisis? The simple take many of us have now adopted, which I think gets at most of it, runs along the lines of my Sam and Janet story. At any given time there are some people who would like to borrow more at current interest rates, but are constrained by norms about how much debt is too much. If these norms are loosened, they will borrow more — which is in fact what happened between around 1980 and 2007, as deregulation, financial innovations nobody understood, and general complacency led to a broad willingness to accept higher leverage.
Now, if people are borrowing, other people must be lending. What induced the necessary lending? Higher real interest rates, which encouraged “patient” economic agents to spend less than their incomes while the impatient spent more.
OK, so that’s what happens when an economy is engaged in increased leveraging. Then something makes people remember the dangers of debt, and leveraging gives way to deleveraging.
You might think that the process would be symmetric: debtors pay down their debt, while creditors are correspondingly induced to spend more by low real interest rates. And it would be symmetric if the shock were small enough. In fact, however, the deleveraging shock has been so large that we’re hard up against the zero lower bound; interest rates can’t go low enough. And so we have a persistent excess of desired saving over desired investment, which is to say persistently inadequate demand, which is to say a depression.
By the way, this is in a fundamental sense a market failure: there is a price mechanism, the real interest rate, that because of the zero lower bound can’t do its job under certain circumstances, namely the circumstances we face now.
What to do? One answer is fiscal policy: let governments temporarily run big enough deficits to maintain more or less full employment, while the private sector repairs its balance sheets. The other answer is unconventional monetary policy to get around the problem of the zero lower bound: maybe unconventional asset purchases, but the obvious answer is to try to create expected inflation, so as to reduce real rates.
Now look at what the serious people say: we must have fiscal austerity, not stimulus, because debt is bad; we must not have unconventional monetary policy, because that would endanger “credibility” (where it’s not at all clear what that means).
So basically, we must do nothing to fix this horrific market failure, and allow unemployment to fester instead.
It’s really awesome, when you think about — not just that we’re committing this massive act of folly, but that it’s all being done in the name of sound policy.
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What to do? One answer is fiscal policy: let governments temporarily run big enough deficits to maintain more or less full employment, while the private sector repairs its balance sheets. The other answer is unconventional monetary policy to get around the problem of the zero lower bound: maybe unconventional asset purchases, but the obvious answer is to try to create expected inflation, so as to reduce real rates.
| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: mattkime
Date: June 26, 2012 09:24AM
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| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: August West
Date: June 26, 2012 12:33PM
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| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: freeradical
Date: June 26, 2012 11:57PM
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August West
Ted,
Unfortunately, I am not an economist, so much of the background to this argument is not familiar to me. However, my first impressions on reading the piece seem to be echoed in the comments below it. These comments speak of a mistrust of government, as well as, structural malformations that prevent an effective use of ever expanding government debt. I think that counter to the persuasive longing to help those who sufer from economic forces beyond their control, a strong argument exists about, for lack of a better term, political cronyism. The money the population intends to help the economy, inordinately benefits those who are politically connected. Of course, the Supreme Court did us no favors with its ulimited money as speech garbage. I hate to be one to watch something burn, but I am less and less hopeful that the cooperation necessary to thrive exists in our society. I wish I could put forth an economic argument for you, but I will have to sit back and try to absorb those that come along.
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Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: Dennis S
Date: June 27, 2012 02:44AM
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| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: August West
Date: June 27, 2012 11:36AM
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| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: Ted King
Date: June 27, 2012 11:55AM
|
Quote
August West
Ted,
Unfortunately, I am not an economist, so much of the background to this argument is not familiar to me. However, my first impressions on reading the piece seem to be echoed in the comments below it. These comments speak of a mistrust of government, as well as, structural malformations that prevent an effective use of ever expanding government debt.
Quote
August West
I think that counter to the persuasive longing to help those who sufer from economic forces beyond their control, a strong argument exists about, for lack of a better term, political cronyism. The money the population intends to help the economy, inordinately benefits those who are politically connected.
Quote
August West
Of course, the Supreme Court did us no favors with its ulimited money as speech garbage.
Quote
August West
I hate to be one to watch something burn, but I am less and less hopeful that the cooperation necessary to thrive exists in our society. I wish I could put forth an economic argument for you, but I will have to sit back and try to absorb those that come along.
| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: Ted King
Date: June 27, 2012 12:42PM
|
Quote
freeradical
Quote
August West
Ted,
Unfortunately, I am not an economist, so much of the background to this argument is not familiar to me. However, my first impressions on reading the piece seem to be echoed in the comments below it. These comments speak of a mistrust of government, as well as, structural malformations that prevent an effective use of ever expanding government debt. I think that counter to the persuasive longing to help those who sufer from economic forces beyond their control, a strong argument exists about, for lack of a better term, political cronyism. The money the population intends to help the economy, inordinately benefits those who are politically connected. Of course, the Supreme Court did us no favors with its ulimited money as speech garbage. I hate to be one to watch something burn, but I am less and less hopeful that the cooperation necessary to thrive exists in our society. I wish I could put forth an economic argument for you, but I will have to sit back and try to absorb those that come along.
Do you have a problem with this?Quote
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: Bill in NC
Date: June 27, 2012 03:37PM
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| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: RgrF
Date: June 30, 2012 12:36AM
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| Re: "Deleveraging and the Depression Gang" Posted by: $tevie
Date: June 30, 2012 12:13PM
|
