Quote from ktm:
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You should be glad that the Fed is there to take this action. What do you suggest should have been done when the real estate market crash crashed and the market needed support? What would you do instead?
I believe this speaks to the crux of the matter, and is the source of disagreement. There are those, they are in the minority, who would have preferred the Fed to have taken a different tact. There are many who think that leaving the gold standard was the watershed event, and it may have been. But isn't the reality that it became impossible to maintain? There are even some who would want to go back to a gold standard! What's done is done, and we are not going back.
The majority of economists believe that a Keynesian approach to recessions --and this was a major recession -- is the best way to handle them. They shy away from using Keynes name because of all the bad publicity, carping and bitching over Tarp, the bailouts and stimulus. The path we are on was chosen because those in charge weighed the alternative, which was at best a prolonged and deep recession and at worst a depression and deflation.
So there remains too opposing schools of thought. Those who seemingly want to deny reality, and those like myself who think the course the Fed, Treasury and Administration embarked on was the correct one, given the circumstances.
It will take years for full recovery, and too many are impatient. I see signs that the economy is moving in the right direction and that a deeper recession, at least so far, has been avoided. Kudos to the Fed. True, the Greenspan Fed played a major role in visiting this mess upon us. Now the Bernanke Fed is rescuing us. Bernanke is not Greenspan, and thank goodness!
There is no painless cure, but I am not going to second guess, I am unqualified to do so, what seems to me to be an exceptionally competent and consistent Bernanke led Fed.
By the way, for those interested, I believe that John Williams at shadowstats.com keeps track of M3.