Procrastination, nation....
The reduction in shadow liabilities remains a massive deflationary
and depressionary force (and probably the main reason why a tripling of
the monetary base has not resulted in very severe inflation). We could
have taken the pain in one go back in 2008 — let the failed banks and
failed sectors fail, let the junk be written down, and let all efforts
go toward rebuilding a more robust system less sensitive to counterparty
risk. But we chose to kick the can down the road, and try to reinflate
the biggest bubble in history through helicopter drops to the financial
sector, the outcome of which has been booming incomes for the rich, and a total lack of growth and opportunity for the poor (except,
perhaps for the dubious “opportunity” to join the masses of the
long-term unemployment and claim a slice of the increasingly
unsustainable welfare pie).
We chose the path of Japan (which has spent the last twenty years depressed) not the path of Iceland (which
is emerging from its depression). We chose to kick the can down the
road. Like Bernanke said, there is a problem with that. No amount of
buying financial sector assets up to an unemployment or inflation or NGDP target — which empirically seems to do more to enrich the financial sector and the big banks than to create jobs — will fix that. The system is rotten, and the debt load is unsustainable. (There’s a Problem With Kicking the Can Down the Road, Azizonomics )
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