by MrBean » Tue 23 Dec 2008, 17:20:58
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kmann', 'D')epression (or threat of depression) would be a likely precondition to Weimar type inflation. We are not in a depression, nor are we likely to enter one. Right now we are in recession, not even as bad as the early '80s, though before it's over it will most likely be as bad, maybe even worse. But there is nothing that indicates deep depression is inevitable. In fact the economy is still working now. I am one who believes recessions are a necessary part of the business cycle. Depressions however should be avoided. Out of hardship comes innovation, increases in productivity (which brings a higher standard of living), reallocation of the workforce, and a renewal in perspective.
We are at or near bottom. It is also possible that we'll come roaring out of this recession, though I think it's more likely going to be a slower recovery - but recovery will come. Anyway to quote Doc Brown: The future hasn't been written yet, it is what we make it to be.
I've lived through one severe depression, the Nordic one that began 1989 - and it sortta never ended, breadlines never went away, they've been slowly growin, now faster and Salvation army is running out of parcels. Depression is feeling and now the whole globe is depressed. Yes it is depression, has been for a long time. There is no official quantifiable metric for depression so of course it will be neve declared by the "officials.
As to your lunacy about bottom, Sorry. The world is not and will be not as you wish. So grow up or weep and grow up. We don't make future, we are not Gods, we adapt - or don't.
The easy depression was about to happen post 2000, the dot.com collapse. The fiscal lunacy and bubble building in real estate and where not since then has made this collapse just infinitely more painfull.