Quote from Misthos:
Good point. But you have to admit, approaching or breaching the GDP threshold is a milestone in itself.
I think it illustrates the inherent flaw of a fractional reserve/fiat model economy. (and no, I'm not suggesting a solution or supporting the abandonment of our current system here - that's another debate) What I am saying is that every subsequent dollar of debt creates a dimishing amount of gdp growth. Debt outpaces gdp growth, that's apparent if you look at debt to gdp for the past 30-40 years. This is obviously and clearly unsustainable.
So what's the end-game? Is there a plan? Do we wait it out for every other nation to default/hyperinflate first? Will the last man standing be the victor and dictate the next global monetary regime? Or is there no plan, that the current crisis is merely an uncontrollable runaway train... and we are merely both spectators and passengers watching a real-time slow-motion (for now) impending train wreck?
Friedmanites, Keynesians, Neo-classical economists, please explain to me how this is normal!