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Paul Ryan at the Economic Club of Chicago
Good speech. Interestingly, Paul Ryan will not be running for the Wisconsin Senate seat that was vacated by retiring Democratic senator Herb Kohl. I'm not sure what this indicates concerning his political future, but I suppose we will have to see. |
Re: Paul Ryan at the Economic Club of Chicago
Parts of that speech sound less like a budget proposal defense, and more like an economic platform for a presidential candidate.
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Re: Paul Ryan at the Economic Club of Chicago
Parts of the speech were somewhat odd as well, particularly when he criticized QEII, which is an economic tactic that Milton Friedman supported / would support. QEII also seems to often be unfairly lumped into the same negative category as the stimulus package.
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Re: Paul Ryan at the Economic Club of Chicago
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If you know otherwise, please share. It would shock the shit out of me. Personally, I think strategies like QE2 can work, but it is a VERY dangerous endeavor that requires skills far beyond my understanding, and perhaps even the ability to accurately guess the future. Right now, working in the housing market, I can tell you that artificially keeping interest rates down is hurting business. Money hasn't been made available and underwriting is as tight as ever. Meanwhile, buyers feel zero pressure to buy as prices remain depressed and there is no fear that interest rates are going to rise. I recently helped put together a market statistics video for the Greater Philadephia area and the numbers are scary considering we're supposed to be in a recovery. |
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Furthermore, when the systemic issues of our economy are examined, such as high unemployment and the debt issue, the only way out of these issues is to increase economic growth. This needs to take precedent over inflationary concerns. I would also draw a careful distinction between fiscal stimulus, such as Obama's stimulus package, and monetary stimulus, such as QEII. A monetary stimulus can be executed by the Fed very quickly, and can in turn be stopped very quickly in the event of looming inflation. In comparison, fiscal stimulus is a much slower and clunkier instrument, and it additionally increases the national deficit, whereas monetary stimulus does not. So, while monetary stimulus is better than fiscal stimulus, I would still agree it is not an ideal tool. A better tool that the Fed can use to boost economic growth is to lower interest rates, but as you know, interest rates are currently 0 percent. Monetary stimulus was the best option among a handful of worse options. Brief excerpt from a WSJ editorial to further my point: Quote:
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Re: Paul Ryan at the Economic Club of Chicago
I think monetary stimulus is an effective way to "plug the hole" in a sinking ship, but I don't believe it has ever proven an effective means to spur real growth, and right now we are 3 years in our "recovery". There needs to be a promise of prosperity, not just cheap money to spur lending and spending.
Spending pushes money around. While this serves a purpose, its a terrible scenario for basing an economy 3 years after a crash. Savings and investment grow wealth, and these rates and cheap money aren't incentivizing either, IMO. As for inflation, I understand that most economists only measure CPI-U and not CPI (due to volatile markets included in CPI), but that doesn't make them any less impactful. Also, costs to producers have skyrocketed, and while market forces are keeping prices stable now, well, I am not as confident as you that inflation is only a long term concern. I hope you are right, but right now I'm fearing at least a mild double-dip because our economic growth is being consumed by increased costs at almost every level of production and consumption. God help us if the rest of the Western world manages to stabilize their debt and currency... EDIT - To not overstate my case: I'm glad we handled TARP and QE the way that we did, but IMO its time to turn off the spicket and allow the economy to find it's own equilibrium. As you said, uncertainty is a huge issue, and uncertainty is caused by unstable markets AND populist government interference. |
Re: Paul Ryan at the Economic Club of Chicago
I found this:
A great explanation of the purpose of the Fed and the cause of the Great Depression. |
Re: Paul Ryan at the Economic Club of Chicago
Yup, and at around 1:30 he reinforces the view of quantitative easing. I like Friedman a lot, he's somewhat of a happy medium between the Keynesians and the Austrians.
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Re: Paul Ryan at the Economic Club of Chicago
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