Taskiss wrote:
I think there would be benefits to increased spending in the really really long run, but none in the short or mid distance game.
Government spending only works in the short term. If you look at the policies since 2008, particularly those of the Obama Administration, you'll see that the government spending did exactly what it was designed to do: push the United States into an demand cycle for durable goods and invested wealth expenditure. That is to say, the New Home Owners Tax Credit, Cash for Clunkers, Education Spending, etc. merely shifted future demand into the present. By making it more appealing to purchase these things, the policies created a short term cash infusion into languishing markets while pretending to demonstrate care for the overall health of the economy. But history demonstrated, as it has time an again, that accelerating demand is merely a temporary stop gap that creates a large market decline than non-intervention. As such, May was the worst month for housing markets in almost 18 years, which is rather ironic, since we have a 100 years or more of historical data demonstrating it's always the strongest month of the housing year.
What's truly disturbing with regard to those sorts of policies is how much they ignore the long term needs and forces in a stable economy. Moving paper money around in debt encumbered structures doesn't come close to generating or perpetuating real spending. What it does is deplete long term viability by chaining current purchases to future productivity.
Taskiss wrote:
Thing is, I think there's much greater benefits (at this point) in letting market forces reach equilibrium.
This depression is an equilibrium exercise as it is. Contrary to the notion of the managed economy, markets world wide are exerting pressure against the artificial displacements created by regulation (no, not regulation in the free market sense that certain parties will inevitably want to argue). As such, supply and demand curves are pushing back against negative pressures in an effort to approach economically valid behaviors. And these pressures are detrimental to policy and government control of market sectors. It gets really complex, but surveying empty housing developments nation wide suggests that there is vastly more supply than demand for housing in the U.S. And, sadly, it's going to take a long time for that relationship to normalize in any meaningful way. Consequently, if we go back to the government policy of shifting demand forward (New Home Owners Tax Credit), we see government policy actually increasing the time to recovery.
Taskiss wrote:
Seems to me, the best thing would have been to not put the gov's thumb on the scale in the first place.
All the historical data indicates this to be true, but we're at the tail end of a world wide experiment in the failure of government.
_________________
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