by Tyler_JC » Sun 16 Nov 2008, 18:01:18
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A') 75% drop in the stock market is a small price to pay to avoid mass starvation. The aggressive deficit spending wasn't the only thing that kept Japan from sliding into the abyss. They also protected key industries that helped anchor them during their economic sh** storm.
You were talking about Japan. I was talking about Japan.
They spent a huge amount of money in the 1990s and 2000s (and still today) propping up failed industries. They had an economic sh** storm because of this misguided policy.
It would have been cheaper to give food stamps and unemployment checks to workers rather than prop up an entire failed industry.
In order for the markets to work, governments must learn to accept the good and the bad.
If the US hadn't dropped real interest rates into negative territory for most of this decade, would we have had a housing bubble (and corresponding debt orgy) anywhere near this massive? Of course not!
And it's worse than that. We didn't get an economic boom or a useful new infrastructure (railroads, internet) from this bubble. Instead we got a bunch of half-finished Florida condos that will be stripped for copper wire. Did society get any lasting economic gain? Did anyone learn a bunch of useful skills that can be translated into new productive jobs?
The Federal Reserve and the Bush Administration refused to allow the 2000-2001 recession to wipe the excesses out of the economy. They removed sensible regulations on banking institutions in order to prop up the housing "boom". Home ownership rates went home and they went right back down. The ownership society proposed by our leaders was an abysmal failure.
Now we're paying for their arrogance to the tune of $5 trillion in bailouts (so far).