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A Cross of Rubber -- Krugman

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Donnachaidh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-31-11 05:10 PM
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A Cross of Rubber -- Krugman
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/31/opinion/31krugman.html?_r=1&ref=opinion

Last Saturday, reported The Financial Times, some of the world’s most powerful financial executives were going to hold a private meeting with finance ministers in Davos, the site of the World Economic Forum. The principal demand of the executives, the newspaper suggested, would be that governments “stop banker-bashing.” Apparently bailing bankers out after they precipitated the worst slump since the Great Depression isn’t enough — politicians have to stop hurting their feelings, too.

But the bankers also had a more substantive demand: they want higher interest rates, despite the persistence of very high unemployment in the United States and Europe, because they say that low rates are feeding inflation. And what worries me is the possibility that policy makers might actually take their advice.

To understand the issues, you need to know that we’re in the midst of what the International Monetary Fund calls a “two speed” recovery, in which some countries are speeding ahead, but others — including the United States — have yet to get out of first gear.

The U.S. economy fell into recession at the end of 2007; the rest of the world followed a few months later. And advanced nations — the United States, Europe, Japan — have barely begun to recover. It’s true that these economies have been growing since the summer of 2009, but the growth has been too slow to produce large numbers of jobs. To raise interest rates under these conditions would be to undermine any chance of doing better; it would mean, in effect, accepting mass unemployment as a permanent fact of life.

More at the link --
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Octafish Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-31-11 05:51 PM
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1. Their Master's Voice.
The sound of money: Global Greedhead Have-Mores want to hold up their "investments" on the backs of everyone else.

Ben Bernanke clearly understands that raising rates now would be a huge mistake. But Jean-Claude Trichet, his European counterpart, is making hawkish noises — and both the Fed and the European Central Bank are under a lot of external pressure to do the wrong thing.

In another life, a friend of mine's dad ran the Rubber Research Institute for Goodyear...

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