"How is Japan Relevant to U.S.?
Good new Martin Wolf column out comparing the U.S. experience in this deflationary deleveraging with what has happened in Japan:
The good news is that the asset price bubbles themselves were far smaller in the US than in Japan (see charts below). Furthermore, the US central bank has been swifter in recognising reality, cutting interest rates quickly to close to zero and moving towards “unconventional” monetary policy.
The bad news is that the debate over fiscal policy in the US seems even more neanderthal than in Japan: it cannot be stressed too strongly that in a balance-sheet deflation, with zero official interest rates, fiscal policy is all we have. The big danger is that an attempt will be made to close the fiscal deficit prematurely, with dire results. Again, the US administration’s proposals for a public/private partnership, to purchase toxic assets, look hopeless. Even if it can be made to work operationally, the prices are likely to be too low to encourage banks to sell or to represent a big taxpayer subsidy to buyers, sellers, or both. Far more important, it is unlikely that modestly raising prices of a range of bad assets will recapitalise damaged institutions. In the end, reality will come out. But that may follow a lengthy pretence.
More here.
Me:
"In the end, reality will come out. But that may follow a lengthy pretence."If you thought in September that:
1) Debt-Deflation, leading to massive unemployment, was the big problem
2) Some sort of Swedish Plan was necessary to help stop Debt-Deflation
3) Quantitative Easing was necessary to stop Debt-Deflation
then much of this crisis has seemed unnecessary. The problem was evident before Lehman, and certain evident the day after. In fact, saving Bear was evidence that somebody saw the problem ahead.
Consequently, I'm not so forgiving or certain that we'll do the right thing at all. It's looked like a save the banks and shareholders at all cost play, written by lobbyists. It never occurred to me that so many people bought into the pretense that our government was anything other than a Cronyist Welfare State. WW II and the 1970s seemed like far worse contexts for financial crises, and I actually thought that we were well situated to make some hard choices. Silly me. I might rather now say, "At the end, reality will come out". The question is really what will end.
Today, i read a post by Wallerstein, whose Modern world System I thought was terrific, but who is politically a few steps away from me. I found myself agreeing with most of the post. What a strange world that we've entered.
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