Quote from zdreg:
correct but recovery came after the excesses in the system were washed out. excesses in advanced modern economies are not allowed to be washed out. the bubbles became greater. the inevitable bust will be much worse and will last much longer.
Quote from sjfan:
And what exactly are you proposing? I'm going to guess it's a protectionist and contractionary.
Quote from Kassz007:
Most people who argue aginst what the Fed is doing right now will say that they want the Fed to do nothing, and the government to do nothing. They want "market forces" to take their course. When you bring up the point that massive deleveraging and deflation would bring the economy into a depression, most of these people argue that that would be a good thing because it would "remove excesses" from the economy, so we can grow again.
I would rather bounce along at the current standard of living than wait in a soup line any day.
Quote from Kassz007:
The ol' "inevitable bust" theory, unsupported by details again. When you look into your crystal ball, what does it tell you that has you so convinced that there will be this big huge inevitable bust?
Quote from Kassz007:
Most people who argue aginst what the Fed is doing right now will say that they want the Fed to do nothing, and the government to do nothing. They want "market forces" to take their course. When you bring up the point that massive deleveraging and deflation would bring the economy into a depression, most of these people argue that that would be a good thing because it would "remove excesses" from the economy, so we can grow again.
I would rather bounce along at the current standard of living than wait in a soup line any day.
Quote from denner:
Food costs
Healthcare costs
Tuition costs
Housing costs
Property taxes
Utility costs
to name a few