| Avinash_Tyagi said: While I agree with him that the recession isn't over and probably wont be for another few moths to half a year, his outlook is a little too pessimistic, his concern is entirely focused on the consumer aspect of the issue, but he forgets that the great depression wasn't solved by letting all of the bad debt work itself out and consumer spending coming back. No in fact it wasn't until the government shouldered massive debt for its time as a percentage of GDP and began a massive public works project (helping to crush the Axis powers), that it was able to come out of the Depression. Letting the banks fail at the early stages of the Depression was one of the reasons it lasted so long because it caused even greater retractions in consumption and investment. Now while the truth is that he's right that we will have to work out this debt at some point, doing it now will not recover the economy, but rather send it into a downward spiral. GDP is the sum of Consumption, Investment, Government expenditures, and Net Exports, so since consumption and investment are down, government spending has to step up to cover the gap. |
Over indebted consumers and the consequence to banks was the reason the recession started, so there's a reason for people to focus on those aspects.
I don't think the Great Depression ended due to higher government debt. In fact the public works projects were seen as failures, and the Keynesians said the government wasn't spending enough.
Look at Japan and Sweden. Their banking crises only ended when the government forced an audit of the banks and let the insolvent ones fail. Shifting debt around and hiding it has never worked so far...
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