theeedude
Lifer
- Feb 5, 2006
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It is growth, but its temporary and will go away once the stimulus effect wears off, as is happening now.
The more allocation of resources done by the government, the worse off we are.
The government needs to go back to reasonable spending levels (close to what we are taking in) and stop draining capital and resources away from the private economy and we need to have a "true" recession and rebuild the economy, its going to hurt *A LOT* but it will pass and things will be better again. But its not politically popular to do it this way.
If we did what I suggested in 2008 we probably would be on our way to a true recovery by now, but nope, we spent, we printed, stimulated, to try to get ourselves out and this is where we are now.
You wouldn't need a stimulus if we had a true collapse and true recovery, economies heal by themselves on their own over time but the pain would probably be gone by now.
Now if we try to stimulate again it will have to be MUCH MUCH bigger than we did before to make any effect on our overstimulated economy. You can only do this so much before the whole thing collapses though.
Printing money and massive government deficit spending does not help in the long run and only a small amount in the short run.
I predict that next collapse that we are heading for will be FAR FAR greater than the collapse that would have happened in 08 if we let it play, and I doubt any stimulus will get us out of it.
I really do hope I'm wrong about all of this though.
Well, don't let the stimulus effect wear off, get more stimulus going. The stimulus was too small for the size of the economy, and most of it was not direct government spending it should have been, but trickle down economics through the banks. Unless there is nothing left for the country to do in terms of improving infrastructure, there is absolutely no good reason to not use the labor that is available to do so. You have to be an absolute masochist or a Republican politician hoping for a weak economy in 2012 to not do so.
Government spending what it takes in during a weak economy is a recipe for disaster. It means we would have simultaneous private sector and public sector contractions and expansions, amplifying bubbles and crashes. Government needs to be countercyclical to the private sector, picking up slack when private sector spending slackens.