M
morganist
Quote from MKTrader:
There's no need to assume anything you just assumed.
The bolded part is particularly off-the-wall. Bernanke is following the global crowd; ergo, he does QE2? What? If anything, he's setting the stage for trade wars and currency interventions. Look at China re: rare earth metals and Brazil's controls as early signs. As one analyst put it, Bernanke is giving other countries two choices: devalue or kill exports.
What a swell guy.
My point in the initial post was that aggregate demand could be generated through increasing investment rather than foreign consumption. Capital goods are goods too, they increase demand and create growth and enable new growth.
So my point was two fold one without the ability to enable new growth through capital investment there would be no recovery no matter where the demand came from and the second part is capital investment is demand in itself and has been ignored in preference to QE.
He has probably triggered a price war through a currency war which he cannot compete in when he didn't have to in the first place. Poor strategy in my opinion.
