"What to do? Goldman (Hatzius, McKelvey, Philips, Tilton, Smyth, Michels and Sum) recommend:
a) A substantial fiscal stimulus (they suggest that a $300-500 billion/ 2-3% of GDP stimulus might not be enough) ( I've agreed with this, even though Buiter hates it- Don )
b) Aggressive GSE lending. Goldman observes that the GSEs have cut back on their lending (really lending that they support through their purchases of mortgages) since the September “Agency” crisis — something that feeds into further falls in home prices. Agency spreads remain wide. ( Agree. We need rational lending to keep up-Don )
c) The Fed could pre-commit to keep policy rates low for a long time ( I don't think people will believe them- Don )
d) The Fed could start to buy long-term assets — starting with Treasuries, and then moving toward more risky assets — to bring long-term rates down, and generally start to deploy their less conventional policy options. ( Yes: That's what I'm talking about in earlier posts. Brad, Paulson has destroyed using "deployed" as a serious word- Don )
Goldman believes that the first three steps should be adopted now — and the last step should be held in reserve.( I say get going- Don) That makes sense to me. I would add policy efforts to try to limit the fall in demand for US and European goods from emerging economies to Goldman’s list of near term policies.( Like What?-Don ) I worry a bit that the US will do too much of the heavy lifting to support global demand and emerging economies with large surpluses will do too little, helping to sustain a larger external deficit than I would like. But right now even I would argue that concerns about the path of external adjustment need to be subordinated to guarding against the risk of an enormous fall in US demand. Goldman’s analysis offers a good starting point for debating how best to try to contain the economic fallout from the current financial turmoil.
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