PDA

View Full Version : The Economic Need for Stable Policies, Not a Stimulus




Bradley in DC
03-05-2009, 09:54 AM
The Economic Need for Stable Policies, Not a Stimulus [Extended version]
An exaggerated swing toward economic stimulus will only delay the return of sustainable prosperity
By Jeffrey D. Sachs

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=the-need-for-stable-policies

...Looking back to the late 1990s, there is little doubt that unduly large swings in macroeconomic policies have been a major contributor to our current crisis. The lessons of the high inflation of the 1970s had supposedly chastened policy makers against trying to fine-tune the economy. The quest for never-ending full employment had contributed to high inflation in that decade, which required years of economic pain to wring out of the system. Monetary policies thereafter were supposed to be “steady as she goes,” not trying to smooth out every fluctuation and business cycle in the economy.

During the decade from 1995 to 2005, then-Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan over-reacted to several shocks to the economy. When financial turbulence hit in 1997 and 1998—the Asian crisis, the Russian ruble collapse and the failure of Long-Term Capital Management—the Fed increased liquidity and accidentally helped to set off the dot-com bubble. The Fed eased further in 1999 in anticipation of the Y2K computer threat, which of course proved to be a false alarm. When the Fed subsequently tightened credit in 2000 and the dot-com bubble burst, the Fed quickly turned around and lowered interest rates again. The liquidity expansion was greatly amplified following 9/11, when the Fed put interest rates down to 1 percent and thereby helped to set off the housing bubble, which has now collapsed.

We need to avoid reckless short-term swings in policy. Massive deficits and zero interest rates might temporarily perk up spending but at the risk of a collapsing currency, loss of confidence in the government and growing anxieties about the government’s ability to pay its debts. That outcome could frustrate rather than speed the recovery of private consumption and investment. ...

Truth Warrior
03-05-2009, 12:48 PM
Stop Intervening in the Economy (http://www.lewrockwell.com/paul/paul510.html)
You're killing us.

Zippyjuan
03-05-2009, 01:14 PM
Officially we have stable prices. Inflation was reported as zero percent over the past year. Can't get much more stable prices than that. But that is an average- there were upswings when energy prices spiked in the summer and declines in the winter as the economic crisis led to deflation. Such swings were even worse before the Fed was founded.

Truth Warrior
03-05-2009, 01:20 PM
Officially we have stable prices. Inflation was reported as zero percent over the past year. Can't get much more stable prices than that. But that is an average- there were upswings when energy prices spiked in the summer and declines in the winter as the economic crisis led to deflation. Such swings were even worse before the Fed was founded. Apply that "faith" to the "fluctuating" price of gold since 1789. :rolleyes: A LIE works just as well as the truth IF you can get enough people to belive in it.

Bradley in DC
03-05-2009, 02:17 PM
Officially we have stable prices.

Stable "policies" not stable prices. ;)

That's actually the way I read it the first time too. :)