hmm I think we disagree. The Japanese did exactly what you proposed in 1990/1991/1992. Nothing. In fact, they failed to admit until much later that they were in trouble at all. It didn't do them much good.Quote from ByLoSellHi:In other words, had the Japanese officials allowed the free market pain machine to crush asset values quickly, and let what would soon be 'zombie banks' and 'financial institutions' fail, rather than try to delay that process, and prop up failed banks, institutions and policy - essentially trying to get the bubble to deflate very slowly, over time - they'd be far better off.
They wanted to just let the "market clean up itself". It didn't. Banks didn't pull loan lines on non-performing creditors. They didn't want to push 40 year long corporate customers into liquidation because they would lose their face. Banks stopped foreclosing on real estate assets "until the markets recover", hiding toxic assets and trying to avert their own bankruptcy. Insurances and banks tried to sit out the problem; just making it worse.
The "free market pain machine" works great when markets are rational and efficient; it ceases doing its magic when participants are irrational (e.g. not declaring bankruptcy, not liquidating non-performing loans, unwilling to buy "good" debt etc.) as the market is broken and becomes inefficient.
Where does this "Let them all fail and let the free market work its way, it will clean up the mess. Look at Japan!" urban legend come from? Jim Rogers?
