Not exactly. Forest fires are occasionally desirable so long as they do not grow out of control. It is the way that deadwood is absorbed and the land is primed for regrowth and renewal. Similarly, periodic and inevitable economic excesses in all its forms must be allowed to proceed to their eventual conclusion. In that way, the excesses are absorbed and the prospects for healthy growth are renewed. A straight line is unnatural and, therefore, undesirable. The loose money policy of the last several years should be a cautionary tale. However, crazy extremes are as unhealthy as uncontrollable forest fires that threat lives and livelihood. The idea is one of balance. When the Fed unnecessarily tried to put out every small, and arguably necessary, forest fire over the last several years, and Bush gave unnecessary tax cuts to the rich rather than pay for his wars or at least reduce the national debt, the scenario was being primed for a dangerous imbalance. And here we are.Quote from bkveen3:
I also agree with you that even though straight line is desirable it is not likely attainable due to human crowd mentality. The best solution is to attempt to smooth the curve as much as possible without bringing on the aforementioned "forest fire".