Re: Pimco's Gross Urges Bush to Bail Out U.S. Homeowners... with taxpayer money
That the issue is far from merely ideological is painfully obvious to anyone undergoing foreclosure. There are real consequences to trying to build an economy on a paper pyramid. Okay, so mortgages were "embedded in the system" via an artifical tax subsidy. Further subsidized by artifically low interest rates and decades of inflation. Now we are supposed to compound the error by using yet more tax subsidy to prop up the resulting mess?
No, it is not I that am living in a fantasy world. The economy has been limping along on a fantasy and is now getting a taste of reality. Here in the US, we have been consuming more than we produce. Either production must take a great leap forward or consumption must decline. There is no mere accounting artifice that is going to relieve us of that reality. To the contrary, the main reason our production has been falling short of our consumption is repeated efforts to deny it and to perpetuate the fantasy.
The housing bubble itself - and its inevitable collapse - is a prime example. Americans were led to substitute paper financial machinations for productive effort to sustain their consumption habits. Cash-out refis led to the illusion that asset price appreciation (aka inflation) was a viable substitute for production as a means to enable consumption. The natural result is ... guess what? ... the gap between our production and consumption widened!
Now that we have a veritable force of nature trying to restore that balance, short-sighted voices come out of the woodwork arguing that it must be fought. The US consumer might actually have to consume less! Or ... perish the thought ... produce something of value to exchange to those who are producing what we consume. It is no fantasy to understand that the inevitable rebalancing will happen. And it involves a true appreciation of reality to understand that yet further official efforts to sustain the imbalance can only dig the US deeper in the hole and make it all the harder to get back out.
Originally posted by jk
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No, it is not I that am living in a fantasy world. The economy has been limping along on a fantasy and is now getting a taste of reality. Here in the US, we have been consuming more than we produce. Either production must take a great leap forward or consumption must decline. There is no mere accounting artifice that is going to relieve us of that reality. To the contrary, the main reason our production has been falling short of our consumption is repeated efforts to deny it and to perpetuate the fantasy.
The housing bubble itself - and its inevitable collapse - is a prime example. Americans were led to substitute paper financial machinations for productive effort to sustain their consumption habits. Cash-out refis led to the illusion that asset price appreciation (aka inflation) was a viable substitute for production as a means to enable consumption. The natural result is ... guess what? ... the gap between our production and consumption widened!
Now that we have a veritable force of nature trying to restore that balance, short-sighted voices come out of the woodwork arguing that it must be fought. The US consumer might actually have to consume less! Or ... perish the thought ... produce something of value to exchange to those who are producing what we consume. It is no fantasy to understand that the inevitable rebalancing will happen. And it involves a true appreciation of reality to understand that yet further official efforts to sustain the imbalance can only dig the US deeper in the hole and make it all the harder to get back out.
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