Category Archives: Macroeconomic policy

Will America’s Besieged Middle Class Snap?

A paradox arises to the extent that it is true that the market is dependent on normative underpinning (to provide the pre-contractural foundations such as trust, cooperation, and honesty) which all contractural relations require: The more people accept the neoclasical paradigm as a guide for their behavior, the more the ability to sustain a market […]

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Guest Post: Discussion of "Animal Spirits" by George Akerlof and Robert Shiller

Submitted by DoctoRx, who comments on the economic and financial scenes at EconBlog Review: In thinking about Animal Spirits, I am reminded of Spencer Tracy’s comment about Katharine Hepburn in Pat and Mike: “Not much meat on her, but what’s there is cherce.” There’s not much meat on the bones of Animal Spirits, and what’s […]

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Guest post: Central banks will face a Scylla and Charybdis flation challenge for years

Submitted by Edward Harrison of the site Credit Writedowns. Nearly a month ago, back on May 5th, I highlighted some testimony by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke before congress in a post labelled, “Bernanke expects recovery later this year".  In his testimony, Bernanke used the phrase ‘Scylla and Charybdis’ to describe the Federal Reserve’s policy […]

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Guest Post: Keynesians, Please Exit Stage Left

Submitted by Rolfe Winkler, publisher of OptionARMageddonBack in February, amidst the neo-Keynesian rage to spend our way out of recession, I argued that stimulus wouldn’t stimulate. Pointing to the graph of the 10-year Treasury vs. 30-year mortgage rates I said that the government wouldn’t be able to flood the market with Treasurys without driving up […]

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Is The Bond Hangover Cure of Inflation Worse Than The Disease?

Uncharacteristically for an economist, Wolfgang Munchau questions the conventional remedy for the debt millstone: use inflation to trash its value in real terms. Bondholders so often get shafted that it’s a predictable outcome. But is it wise? Munchau argues that regardless, the piper must be paid. If the powers that be succeed in creating meaningful […]

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Stiglitz: Bank Plan Destined to Fail, Doomed By White House/Wall Street Ties

Big name economists continue their attacks on the Obama bank rescue programs. Yesterday Willem Buiter, one of Europe’s most highly respected macroeconomists, continued his salvos, contending that the funding was woefully inadequate to recapitalize or otherwise prop up financial firms. The longer the US delays winding up sick banks, the more time wasted and good […]

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Guest Post: FDIC’s Insurance Commitments 34% Higher Than Reported

Submitted by Rolfe Winkler, publisher of OptionARMageddon. [Reader note: I thought it useful to add commentary around the FDIC data. Those that would prefer to skip straight to it, see the chart and read paragraphs 4-9]. Conventional wisdom says that financial companies are having trouble borrowing because credit markets are broken. This is dangerously wrong. […]

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Japanese Expert Criticizes US Wishful Thinking on Economic Crisis

The George Santayana saying, “Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it,” is so oft repeated as to verge on cliche. Yet the US variant of this syndrome is to be aware of history, then rationalize how it does not apply to us. Japanese policy makers from the early days of the […]

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Guest Post: More Debt Won’t Rescue the Great American Ponzi

Submitted by Rolfe Winkler, CFA, publisher of OptionARMageddon.com Policy-makers not only misunderstand the economic crisis, they continue to underestimate it. Consequently, solutions to date have not only failed to “fix” anything, they have made the problem worse. The problem isn’t falling asset prices, it’s not rising foreclosures, it’s too much debt. With an assist from […]

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Martin Wolf: Rethinking the Lessons of Japan’s Debt Unwind

Ah, today the Financial Times reminds me of the way it was back in early 2007, when it was clearly heads and shoulders above any US paper. Wonder why I have fewer days like that, It isn’t improved reporting by the US media (although they are further down the curve). I suspect that the FT […]

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