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View Full Version : FED: Greenspan's Nightmare Is Much of the World's Dream




bobbyw24
03-11-2010, 01:36 PM
Wednesday 10 March 2010
by: Mark Weisbrot | The Center for Economic and Policy Research

Alan Greenspan had a dream, or rather a nightmare. Greenspan seems to have woken up in a cold sweat one morning in fear that the period of "disinflationary pressures" that had kept inflation low since the 1990s was about to end. This was 2007, when he published his auto-biographical economic treatise, "The Age of Turbulence." Despite his well-known love for economic data, and poring over the latest reports from every statistical agency, he did not realize that he was sitting on a housing bubble of epic proportions. Not seeing the bubble (he also missed the prior stock market bubble that accumulated and burst on his watch, causing the 2001 downturn), he could not know that it would soon collapse and cause a very ugly recession, in which inflation would be irrelevant.

This by itself should be enough to question the wisdom of central bankers, since the evidence for both of these world-historic asset bubbles was blindingly obvious once they had reached a certain size. But Greenspan's nightmare is scary for other reasons, some of which will become increasingly relevant as the world economy recovers.

As Greenspan details in his book, the reason for his nightmare is that the world was depleting its stock of hundreds of millions of unemployed people, including those of the former Soviet Union and also in rural China. In other words, "too many" of them had become employed, and this was allowing for wages of factory workers in China to rise. So long as China had a huge mass of unemployed, wages were held in check, and - according to Greenspan -- competition from low-wage production there held down wages in the rest of the world, including even rich countries like the United States. All good! Until the nightmare started.


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http://www.truthout.org/greenspans-nightmare-is-much-worlds-dream57587

Brian4Liberty
03-11-2010, 02:50 PM
So long as China had a huge mass of unemployed, wages were held in check, and - according to Greenspan -- competition from low-wage production there held down wages in the rest of the world, including even rich countries like the United States.

As I have said on this forum a 100 times, mass importation of cheap labor and out-sourcing of jobs was an intentional plan by Greenspan, meant to prevent wage inflation. They intentionally destroyed the middle-class. He and the government could do anything they wanted, as long as they could depress wages. It is a method of redistribution of wealth from the masses to the Oligarchy.

The best thing for individuals is a labor shortage. It is increases the value of each individual.

The best thing for the elite is a huge population of desperate slaves.

hugolp
03-11-2010, 03:21 PM
As I have said on this forum a 100 times, mass importation of cheap labor and out-sourcing of jobs was an intentional plan by Greenspan, meant to prevent wage inflation. They intentionally destroyed the middle-class. He and the government could do anything they wanted, as long as they could depress wages. It is a method of redistribution of wealth from the masses to the Oligarchy.

The best thing for individuals is a labor shortage. It is increases the value of each individual.

The best thing for the elite is a huge population of desperate slaves.

Of course he did. And low interest rates was the main reason why jobs went to China.