I have always said that the decline in the housing market is at the root of the economic downturn and our financial market stress. And the economy, as it slows further, threatens to prolong this decline, as well as the stress on our financial institutions and financial markets.
A troubled-asset purchase program, to be effective, would require a huge commitment of money. In mid-September, before economic conditions worsened, $700 billion in troubled asset purchases would have had a significant impact. But half of that sum, in a worse economy, simply isn’t enough firepower.
Pretty Lady is, of course, not an economist. But even she can see clearly that if the American economy is based solely upon real estate prices, the American economy is very ill indeed.
7 comments:
How about just greedy? Everyone wants something for nothing, right? And where can you get something for nothing better than real estate, which goes up in value for no reason at all?
No, I think evil. There is much too long a line of Goldman Sachs honchos popping up in one administration after another. It would surprise me if Paulson's allegiances were to any but his own brotherhood.
I suppose an argument could be made that greed is evil.
One of the most staunch ultra right-wing Southern conservatives I know thinks that the Paulson plan is actually, literally, overtly evil. There are no controls on the money, and it is being funnelled directly into the pockets of the people who created this mess, with no accountability.
See, that doesn't sound evil. That sounds greedy. Paulson funnels money to his friends, they give him a high-paying job when he leaves public service, he recommends a successor who also knows how to play ball, everyone wins.
Except us. But that's nothing new. The good thing these days, to me, is that Americans have enough surplus to feed themselves (a bit too much in some cases) and keep roofs over their heads and still throw enormous sums of money away on taxes to fund bailouts and whatnot. That's pretty incredible. Back in the Middle Ages a tax rate like we have now would've lasted about eight seconds before the landowner got lynched.
I mean, I consider myself to be struggling financially, but I'm in no danger of going hungry or being homeless. My car sucks, I don't always have underwear, a lot of my shirts have holes in them, and I can't afford panels to paint on, but I'm well-fed (again, a bit too well-fed), well-medicated, and I have a nice mattress. The collapse of the economy isn't so bad, really.
Greed is when you keep doubling your bet. You'll eventually lose and go home sadder and wiser (maybe). Evil is when you play with loaded dice.
I've been thinking about this and I think what you don't realize, George, is that they're not playing a game. They're playing a meta-game, a game of games. Part of the meta-game is changing the games you're playing in, changing the rules as you go along. They're not gambling with loaded dice; they're changing the rules that say loaded dice aren't allowed so that they are. That's not evil unless you're constrained by the rules of the game and can't play the meta-game; and of course you can, if you want. Most people don't think like that, though.
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