The FT is making the same mistake that everyone else makes.
For the last time, the USGOV/FED is not interested in just US economy anymore, but the entire world. Seen from that perspective, "equality" has skyrocketed, in fact at the expense of the US.
Will it work? I have no idea. If it does work, it may be a "1 step backwards to take two steps forward" strategy, and there will be a lag, which may be what we are seeing. It it works, DOW 100,000. If it doesn't, WWIII.
For the last time, the USGOV/FED is not interested in just US economy anymore, but the entire world. Seen from that perspective, "equality" has skyrocketed, in fact at the expense of the US.
Will it work? I have no idea. If it does work, it may be a "1 step backwards to take two steps forward" strategy, and there will be a lag, which may be what we are seeing. It it works, DOW 100,000. If it doesn't, WWIII.
Quote from jem:
When the Fed supports the govt in its deficit spending via QE not only do stocks go up but the price of food and oil go up.
For instance every 10 dollar increase in the price of oil - takes .3 percent out of gdp. (I believe the increase in the price of food and the increase in taxes also soaks up a lot of gpd. )
Then as the economy starts to get choked off the price of oil comes down.
Overall trying to increase the GDP via deficit spending seems very difficult. I realize the fed is trying to increase commercial real estate values so its member banks can become solvent... but do we really need to debase the dollar to this?
The private sector has to grow and become more efficient... like the rest of the world we have to manufacture things the world wants... the dollar has to get stronger not weaker.
We need to encourage investment in new techonology via lower taxes... We need to allow our investors to keep more of their profits so they can channel it back into to new technologies.
By the way
This article also points out what I have been saying for years.
This crazy spending in washington is what is causing the wealth inequality in america.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4fdcd560-fb32-11e1-a983-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2MVu8w9d0
