Finally, some people are coming out and questioning the actions of
the Federal Reserve. Here is a comment from David Einhorn (my
emboldening):
Secretly, Fed officials likely agrees with Mr. Einhorn. Yet they cannot say what they think for two very simple reasons:
Sometimes you have to look at what is the base assumption. because sometimes you have a groupthink around the base assumption and everybody agrees to the same thing and acts reflexively and doesn’t really challenge what is going on. I think we have reached that point with the monetary policy. The assumption is that if you want the economy to improve, if you want more jobs, if you want more consumption, what we need is ever-easing monetary policy. My point is that if one jelly donut is a fine thing to have, 35 jelly donuts is not a fine thing to have, and it gets to a point where it’s not a question of diminishing returns but it actually turns out to be a drag. I think we have passed the point where incremental easing of Federal policy actually acts as a headwind to the economy and is actually slowing down our recovery, and I am alarmed by the reflexive groupthink of the leaders which is if we want a stronger economy, we need lower rates, we need more QE and other such measures.This blog has been saying this for over three years now and in stronger terms. It would have been better had Mr. Einhorn gone further in his observations, but for one still in the system that can be very dangerous. If markets were free and government was limited, many would speak out without fear of retribution.
Secretly, Fed officials likely agrees with Mr. Einhorn. Yet they cannot say what they think for two very simple reasons:
- Stopping QE is both an admission of failure and a recognition that government cannot manage an economy. Attempting to do so is what caused the current mess. Government has finally become so big and intrusive that the economy has ceased to work. It will not rebound until government size is cut, both in terms of spending and regulations.
No comments:
Post a Comment