Wednesday, December 10, 2008

"we must instead allow it to be destroyed, to be liquidated in as orderly a fashion as possible, as quickly as possible."

There are lots of people who don't like what I'm calling for. Sudden Debt is one:

"The latest 3-month US Treasury bill auction resulted in 0% rate and was oversubscribed four times. How about that, for deflation and risk aversion, eh?


I am not surprised. This is the hangover following the wild easy-credit party that ultimately saw financial engineering elevated to the same position as real engineering (yes, I was offended). The same party that created the awesome stupidity of $65 trillion in credit default swaps which first allowed piling on much more debt than prudent, and which are now inhibiting the cathartic process of its quick demise.

What's next? Will free money (for the federal government, anyway) result in another Greenspanite bubble? No, no time soon. This development is not something that the government wants, you understand. It clearly underscores the fact that deflation is happening as we speak, that assets carrying even the smallest amount of risk are shunned in favor of mere capital preservation. The debt trap has become - predictably - a deflationary liquidity trap, American economists' and policy makers' greatest phantom menace since 1929.

I will, thus, say it once more: instead of allowing this deleterious process to drag out for years by attempting to preserve debt (as the Fed and Treasury are doing now), we must instead allow it to be destroyed, to be liquidated in as orderly a fashion as possible, as quickly as possible."

I'm certainly for decreasing our debt, but I'm not sure what's being called for. Selling government assets? Increasing taxes? Cutting expenses?

I'll only say that the whole point of my plan is to ultimately reduce the debt and deficit. It is paradoxical that the only way to do that is to temporarily increase our debt, but such is the world.

1 comment:

yoyomo said...

Hel advocates massive default on private debt to purge the system of nonperforming "assets"; I'm not quite certian what he proposes to do with federal debt obligations but he was for defaulting on Fannie and Freddie bonds and guarantees. That is how he proposes to reduce debt levels in the economy.