Tuesday, October 28, 2008

"Some may have taken DeLong’s idea as a Swiftian modest proposal, but it’s sounding more sensible every day." Was Swift Joking?

Excellent post by James Suroweicki based on a Brad DeLong proposal that I missed:

"
Buy Really Low, Sell High

A couple of weeks ago, economist Brad DeLong suggested (at least semi-seriously, I think) that now might be a good time to “take the Social Security Trust Fund balance out of Treasuries and move it into equities.” As he put it, “Buy low, sell high after all. Just saying…”

This idea was proposed by the Clinton Administration, but didn’t get much traction, in part because Alan Greenspan opposed it for what, in retrospect, looks like largely ideological reasons, namely his disbelief that the government could own U.S. equities without interfering with corporate behavior. This isn’t entirely a red herring, but it’s hardly an insuperable obstacle, either. And given the massive government interventions we’ve seen in the past few months, having the government invest in index funds hardly seems like some intolerable transgression of free-market principles, either. (That’s not even to mention the fact that the sovereign wealth funds of myriad foreign governments have already bought major stakes in American companies, without any obvious disastrous effects.)"

It makes terrific sense, and just like cutting the defense budget, there's not a chance in hell of it passing.

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