http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comm ... serve.html
...Entitled "Deflation: Making Sure It Doesn’t Happen Here", it is a warfare manual for defeating economic slumps by use of extreme monetary stimulus once interest rates have dropped to zero, and implicitly once governments have spent themselves to near bankruptcy.
The speech is best known for its irreverent one-liner: "The US government has a technology, called a printing press, that allows it to produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost."
So it looks like the wheels might fall off the cart before March of next year.Investors basking in Wall Street's V-shaped rally had assumed that this bizarre episode was over. So did the Fed, which has been shutting liquidity spigots one by one. But the latest batch of data is disturbing.
The ECRI leading indicator produced by the Economic Cycle Research Institute plummeted yet again last week to -6.9, pointing to contraction in the US by the end of the year. It is dropping faster that at any time in the post-War era.
The latest data from the CPB Netherlands Bureau shows that world trade slid 1.7pc in May, with the biggest fall in Asia. The Baltic Dry Index measuring freight rates on bulk goods has dropped 40pc in a month. This is a volatile index that can be distorted by the supply of new ships, but those who watch it as an early warning signal for China and commodities are nervous.
Andrew Roberts, credit chief at RBS, is advising clients to read the Bernanke text very closely because the Fed is soon going to have to the pull the lever on "monster" quantitative easing (QE)".
If a Keynesian approach were going to work, it would have by now. Apparently the Europeans have realized that and are going to start restraining their deficit spending. If government tries to use the printing press as their way out of this, yeah, buy gold. Buy as much of it as you can afford.
This downturn was caused by the same thing the Great Depression was caused by: The evaporation of a huge amount of wealth that resulted in a debt crisis and then a liquidity crisis. SOME of Roosevelt's responses were correct. Some of them prolonged the Depression by some 5 to 7 years. Roosevelt's biggest mistake was in wage controls. That prevented employers from lowering wages when profits fell. As a result, they had to close their doors and put millions of people on the street unemployed. Minimum wages and union contracts do that today in our economy.
What the government should have done is bought the toxic mortgages and if the loan defaulted and went into foreclosure and if the home were older than 10 years, raze the building. Then put the property on the market as a building lot. This would not count as a home sale and so it would not depress the median home price in the area. It would reduce the supply of existing homes so as to offer support for the remaining home values in the market. Some cities are doing this wholesale (Flint, MI for example). The government could have done that with millions of foreclosed homes and removed a lot of inventory from the market and preserved the values of a lot of mortgages out there preventing them from going under and maintaining equity so that owners could refinance at lower rates.
Instead we are going to get the "incredible secret money machine" approach where the Federal Government just starts printing notes like crazy.
Welcome to Zimbabwe