by MonteQuest » Thu 18 Dec 2008, 01:17:07
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', ' ') I don't mean this confrontationally at all - What would you do Monte? If you were the fed chairman, what would you do right now?
Take the pain rather than look desperately for the next bubble to try and inflate. Remember the tech boom? Rather than take the pain, they moved the bubble to housing with way too low interest rates. Now that bubble has popped.
When are they going to learn that propping up a broken system will simply make the later crash even more severe? Once the liquidity is starting to be mopped up, economic growth is likely to collapse once again unless real wages can be improved and we find a new cheap, readily available energy source.
Remember my Member Quote? "A market continuing to function under a business model designed for cheaper resources was doomed to hit recession."
The U.S. has taken the attitude that other countries must support the dollar because it is in their interest to do so. But there's a limit to what other countries can do this time out as it is a global crash. It is utterly foolish for the U.S. to pursue a policy that is destructive to the dollar while counting on Asian governments to prop it up, while people in the U.S. have their savings put at risk due to all the bailouts.
We are going to Vegas and the house always wins.
Edit: The market must be allowed to function,
regardless of the consequences.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."