Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF
Until we all are on The Biggest Loser!
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As a nation, it does indeed look like that's exactly where we're headed!
But I would like to see the nation do the metaphorical equivalent of seeking counsel from a dietician and a personal trainer, rather than just continue a course of "feel good" drugs and hope for the best.
Zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) is generally considered an emergency measure designed to get an economy through a crisis. Yet the Fed now promises to maintain that policy, began in December 2008, for an extended period of time. The biggest banks can now rest assured that they will be able to continue to play the carry trade with little risk. And since virtually nothing has been done about too-big-to-fail, they know that in a pinch they'll be backstopped by the Treasury and the Fed.
I addition to the most aggressive monetary policy in modern U.S. history, we also began pouring unprecedented amounts of pseudo-Keynesian fiscal stimulus into the economy in early 2009. Of course, the fact that such measures have never worked very well doesn't dissuade big-spending political hacks. It's so much fun to buy votes with other people's money!
We got another very poor jobs report this morning. It's been obvious for some time now that our economic policy prescriptions have not been working very well. We need fundamental tax reform, entitlement reform, budgeting reform, and financial system reform. Dodd-Frank was written with considerable (to say the least!) input from banking industry lobbyists, and does little to address the most critical problems.
Our economy suffers from severe
structural problems, and they can't be solved by simply applying the usual monetary and fiscal stimulus prescriptions.