The Real Recovery | November 21, 2009 | 3 comments

Things Could Get Ugly Fast

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Ihatethemall
Things could get ugly fast. With the Democrats backing-off on a second round of stimulus, the Fed signaling an end to quantitative easing, and Obama moaning about rising deficits; there's a good chance that the stumbling recovery could turn into another sharp plunge. Bank lending is shrinking, consumers spending is off, housing prices are falling, unemployment is soaring and the wholesale credit markets are in a shambles. This isn't the time to slash government support in the name of "fiscal responsibility". Obama needs to ignore the gloomsters and alarmists and pay attention to the Nobel laureates like Joe Stiglitz and Paul Krugman. They're the guys who know how to steer the ship to safe water.


But there are troubling signs that Obama has joined the ranks of the deficit hawks and is planning a policy-reversal that will pitch the economy into a nosedive. Here's what he said on his tour through Asia:


"I think it is important to recognize if we keep on adding to the debt, even in the midst of this recovery, that at some point, people could lose confidence in the U.S. economy in a way that could actually lead to a double-dip recession."

So it's true. Obama has aligned himself with the faux-prophets and dollar demagogues who think that the end is nigh. But trimming the deficits now (when they should be expanding) will lead to a viscous cycle of debt deflation that will push-down asset prices, increase defaults, force more layoffs, slow consumer spending, lower earnings and send the economy into a downward spiral. The president is paving the way to a double-dip recession, a slump that could be worse than the first.

Has Obama perused the jobless figures lately? Has he noticed the Fed shoving more than a $1 trillion under the collapsing housing market with no sign of improvement? Has anyone told our blinkered accountant-in-chief that the entire financial system is propped-up with $11.4 trillion of dodgy scaffolding that could buckle in the first big gust?

Obama has either taken leave of his senses or he's spending too much time listening to the cheerless Jeremiahs on the Internet. He needs break their spell and seek the counsel of the experts who get paid to crunch the numbers---real economists. Cutting government spending and raising taxes--the two ways that deficits are paid off--is the fast-track to disaster. Don't go there.

If Obama needs more proof that the economy is still flatlining, he should thumb through Fed chair Ben Bernanke's speech to the Economic Club of New York which was delivered on Tuesday. The presentation was a sobering snapshot of lingering depression with precious few glimmers of light. Here's an excerpt:

"The flow of credit remains constrained, economic activity weak, and unemployment much too high. Future setbacks are possible....How the economy will evolve in 2010 and beyond is less certain....

Access to credit remains strained for borrowers who are particularly dependent on banks, such as households and small businesses. Bank lending has contracted sharply this year, and the Federal Reserve's Senior Loan Officers Opinion Survey shows that banks continue to tighten the terms on which they extend credit for most kinds of loans...

Household debt has declined in recent quarters for the first time since 1951. For their part, many small businesses have seen their bank credit lines reduced or eliminated, or they have been able to obtain credit only on significantly more restrictive terms. The fraction of small businesses reporting difficulty in obtaining credit is near a record high, and many of these businesses expect credit conditions to tighten further.
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3 comments // Things Could Get Ugly Fast

  • AsperGirl
    • 0
      AsperGirl  
    • Is the author clueless about the dangers of ongoing wild deficit spending? By calling those who point out the dangers of doing so "faux-prophets and dollar demagogues" the author of this piece is indeed apparently clueless or in denial.

      The Administration and Feds went out on a limb to do what they did do in terms of stimulus. Unfortunately for us, Obama and Congress squandered the stimulus on too much special interest handout gaming, as many of us pointed out. Why, when stark joblessness was the next looming disaster, did so much of the "stimulus" go to arts programs, elitist university funding, and other rewards for Obama's left wing academia base?

      Unsurprisingly, the "stimulus" has not worked to stave off part II of the economic doom scenario -- the nightmare unemployment problem that can get out of control and spiral our economy down.

      Too bad, we can't continue to inject massive "stimulus" on credit. Obama, et al, shot the Federal wad on rewarding their base with a faux "stimulus" package that accomplished anything but stimulus.

    • 2 years ago
  • Pat_Murph
    • 0
      Pat_Murph  
    • After running up 11.4 trillion in debt the Bush gang demanded 700Billion fr a few friends and like bank robbers of the 1800s he quickly got out of town. Turning the US into a debt ridden nation ,overextended and bogged down in a two front war with no end in sight., handed the White house over to President Obama.
      The Republicans promptly started blaming the state of the nation on everyone but one group, themselves.
      That's pretty sad since their policies caused the current condition.

    • 2 years ago
  • Brazil617MA
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