How to cure an economic depression
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Paris, France 鈥 鈥淎s recently as two years ago, anyone predicting the current state of affairs (not only is unemployment disastrously high, but most forecasts say that it will stay very high for years) would have been dismissed as a crazy alarmist.鈥
That was Paul Krugman in today鈥檚 newspaper. Thomas Friedman is fixing problems in the Middle East, so we鈥檒l have to make do with Krugman to entertain us on economic matters.
It is amazing that anyone takes Krugman seriously. It is obvious now that he 鈥 and his fellow interventionists 鈥 had no idea what was going on two years ago.
Now, at least he sees the drift of events more clearly; we are headed towards a Japan-style deflationary slump.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a good bet that by some measures we鈥檒l be seeing deflation by sometime next year,鈥 he writes.
鈥淢r. Bernanke has thought long and hard about how to avoid a Japanese-style economic trap, and the Fed鈥檚 researchers have been obsessed for years with the same question. But here we are, visibly sliding toward deflation鈥︹
So you see, dear reader, even a Nobel Prize-winning dog can learn a new trick. Now, he sees through a glass darkly鈥 Soon, he will be face to face with deflation.
Of course, the poor man still completely misunderstands what is really going on. But what do you expect? His career depends on not understanding it. Krugman would have to turn his back on his neo-Keynesian creed if he ever caught on to the plot. He would have to look for a new job if he were ever to tell his readers about it. Almost everyone wants the feds to 鈥渄o something鈥 to avoid the Japanese 鈥渢rap.鈥 Imagine what would happen if The NY Times鈥 leading economist were to say:
鈥淔orget it. The feds have already done too much. Following my advice, they were a major cause of the present crisis. Following my advice, they have made it worse. I was wrong. Now the best thing they can do is to withdraw as gracefully as possible.鈥
That鈥檚 not what Times readers want to hear. It鈥檚 not what anyone wants to hear, except us 鈥渃razy alarmists鈥 here at The Daily Reckoning.
We鈥檝e been talking about the Japan trap for years. Economist Richard Koo calls it a 鈥渂alance sheet recession.鈥 He鈥檚 right about that. The private sector destroys excess capacity and excess debt. When it鈥檚 over, the private sector balance sheet looks a lot better.
Of course, it could happen faster. In Japan, it may still be going on. Why? Because the Japanese feds worked so hard to stop it. Monetary stimulus. Fiscal stimulus. Quantitative easing. They tried everything. And kept at it for nearly 20 years.
But what they were really doing was preventing the one fix that really fixes. It is as if they were letting the air out of the market economy鈥檚 tires鈥nd then were amazed that it didn鈥檛 roll.
You know what cures a depression, dear reader? We鈥檒l tell you. A depression.
A depression destroys excessive debt. Businesses with too much debt go broke. Bonds that can鈥檛 be paid go into default. Households that have spent more than they could afford go broke.
Problem solved. Debt disappears.
Then, the economy can grow again.
So what does Krugman suggest? You guessed it: stop the process of debt destruction at all costs! Do what the Japanese did, in other words, only do more of it.
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