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Welcoming the Failure of the Economic Recovery Team

Written by Subject: Economy - Economics USA
06/28/10 Waterford, Ireland – The latest from the G20 meeting in Toronto. As you recall, the meeting was billed as a showdown between the Germans and the Americans…that is, between the deficit cutters and the big spenders…

That is, between the people without a hope and the people without a clue.

TORONTO (AP) – World leaders must work together to make sure the global recovery stays on track, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Saturday.

Geithner made his remarks as President Barack Obama has warned his counterparts from the Group of 20 nations to not reel in measures to stimulate their economies too quickly. The United States fears doing so could endanger the global recovery.

Asked if the global economy could slip back into another “double dip” recession, Geithner said the answer to that question hinges on decisions made by world leaders. “It is within the capacity of the people who are going to be in those rooms together in the next few days to avoid that outcome,” he said.

“If the world economy is to expand at its potential, if growth is going to be sustainable in the future, then we need to act together to strengthen the recovery and finish the job of repairing the damage of the crisis.”


As near as we can tell, the recovery has been on the wrong road since it started its motor. And the folks in Toronto couldn’t put it “back on track,” even if they knew what they were doing. All they can do is get out of the way.

The system has too much debt. It needs to get rid of some of that debt – by write offs, defaults, and pay downs. Things that must happen, must happen sooner or later. Better sooner than later.

But what IS happening now?

World trade is breaking down – the Baltic Dry index, a measure of world trade, recently fell 17 days in a row.

Consumer spending is breaking down – the “consumer discretionary” sector has turned ominously negative.

Stocks are breaking down – the Dow fell 9 points on Friday…145 points the day before….

Employment is breaking down – you know the story.

Housing is breaking down – not since 1963 have people bought so few new houses.

Does this sound like a recovery? Of course not.

What it sounds like is a defeat. A failure for the recovery team.

But don’t worry, boys, sometimes failure is the best you can hope for. And come to think of it…defeat is not so bad. Think how much better off the Chinese would have been if Mao’s long march had ended in the total collapse of his army. And suppose George W. Bush hadn’t been such a total failure? People might not have elected Barack Obama. And what if the invention of the television had never caught on? Americans might still have some dignity and brains….

Not only do collapse and failure help prevent bigger mistakes, they also correct mistakes after you’ve made them. Running up debt equal to 362% of global GDP was probably not the smartest thing the human race ever did. Trying to ‘recover’ the economy and reproduce the system that produced those debts is even dumber.

Instead, let’s have a good old fashioned correction…a collapse…a failure of the Geithner, Bernanke, Obama team. We’re going to have it anyways. Bring it on. Get it over with!

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

Welcoming the Failure of the Economic Recovery Team was originally published in The Daily Reckoning on 6/28/10.

2 Comments in Response to

Comment by foundZero
Entered on:

Failure? Seemed like a victory of modern political street theater to me. All the world saw was the Black Flag burning and smashing things and Canada got a good lesson in living under the NWO. Cops in Canada got a good lesson learning what it's like to be an American cop. Journalists got a good lesson in PROVING that all right-wing violence is terrorism and all left-wing violence involves stuffed animals and flowers.

And nobody learned a Gods-damned thing. You call this a failure? You just aren't on the right "secret Santa" list is all.

Comment by John Morgan
Entered on:

I agree.  Allowing the market to collapse and correct itself is a natural process when it has been so over-inflated by the corporate Federal Reserve central bank.  A collapse is the free market solution to purging the system of the parasites, and the longer the bankers try to prop up the system the more painful it will be when the deflation hits us.

 I can only hope the People take charge and demand an honest currency and sound monitary policy after the collapse instead of allowing the banks to consolidate their power and tighten their grip on the world.



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