Like all the California posters all you do is insult people who disagree with you.
What's the point of even posting when you don't even use your brain to consider whether I am right in my thinking or not?
Why don't you use your head instead and see the economic path these geniuses have led us on? How can you come to any other conclusion other than that they are clueless?
This man is a complete idiot, and if you believe the Fed can afford to actually raise interest rates in this economic environment, you're crazy too!
Boy now that is pot calling the kettle black, Mr. Personality. I didn't call you any names, I just posted a famous quote, after you called me a complete moron. So Rick I will be delicate, go f... yourself!!!!
By all means keep listening to these wonderful academicians, Greenspan, Bernake, Westbury.
Please show me where Wesbury supported the rate cut policies of Bernanke, and Greenspan and where I supported the policies of Bernanke? Come on Rick, if you want to call names, and pick fights then please back up your accusations with demonstrable facts. I will be waiting for you to find what doesn't exist.
Wesbury has been pounding the Friedman monetary policy creed for years. How do you think Mises, Hayek, Mencken, Sowell and Rothbard would respond to our present state of affairs, or the state of affairs since September, when the Fed started cutting rates? Would they have proposed pumping excessive liquidity into the system, cut rates to the point where the real fed funds rate is negative? If you believe that Rick, then all I can say is pull out your Rothbard, or Sowell, or Mises and start reading again.
Most economists are Keynesyans at heart, and that is what is taught in the Universities. It is garbage incarnate as Keynes believed in bending the rules to accommodate difficult economic circumstances.
Wesbury has been saying for years that the Fed has been too loose with money, and those actions lead to our present state of affairs. The loose money lead to $130 a barrel, a housing bubble like no other, commodity prices running out of control, gold at $1000 an ounce. How you take what Wesbury is saying and turn him into a neo-Keynesian boggles the mind. He is the opposite of a Keynesian.
His whole point Rick, and if you would go back and read it again is this. The gas crisis of the '70's and the high inflation of the '70's, just like the high gas prices and high inflation today are functions of loose monetary policy. His point is very simple Rick, whenever the Fed Funds rate falls below the Core PPI, you will set off a round of rapid inflation. It happened in the late '70's, and it took 2+ years of aggressive inflation fighting monetary policy by Paul Volker to get it under control. It happened again in 2003 when Greenspan cut rates to 1%, below the core PPI, and WHAM. Gold went through the roof, and housing inflation (which is not measured by the CPI) went through the roof, and commodities have have had their single longest bull market ever, with virtually every commodity at all-time highs.
The only thing that the country can do is try to rebuild it's standing by stopping the current inflation by not printing so much money!
Earth to McFly, what do you think Wesbury is saying?
I don't care what the man's bio says. He doesn't understand economics well enough to make an economy work in the real world, he only knows enough to impress other academics who also think they are economists but are actually failures.
Too all Laker fans, I accused you all of hubris a few weeks back. I apologize, this is the absolute description of hubris.
That is what is causing inflation, the easy monetary policy in the US fueled a world-wide boom, most note-ably in China, India as well as Taiwan, Korea and Japan.
Rick, I don't think the Japanese Prime Minister or the Japanese people got that memo.
Raising interest rates now would be suicide, since the housing market was the only thing in the US that benefited from the easy money policy- along with the stock market. Now that both those bubbles have burst, both houses and stocks are now subject to a massive re-valuation. Raising interest rates will only serve to force these revaluations even lower.
Rick, please detail for me what has happened since September 18 (happy birthday JN) when the Fed began this rate cutting cycle? Please show me how all of these rate cuts have actually turned the horrible housing market around. Have mortgage rates fallen? Have home price increased? Has the months of inventory gone down? Have permits, home starts, pending sales, sales of existing homes, or any other meaningful measurement improved since the Fed started cutting rates? The fed rates cuts since September have done nothing for housing, so please explain to me how raising rates is going to destroy housing. The problem in housing is not high rates, the problem in housing is that home prices and inventory are too high, which has lead to record amounts of foreclosures, which had made that paper worthless, and made it cheaper and easier for homeowners to walk away from bad mortgages and get the same home for much less money just down the street.
What has happened to the price of oil since the rate cut started? It was about $73 a barrel, and today it is $130+. Has there been a massive increase in demand since mid-September, or has the supply fallen drastically? Raise rates, strengthen the $, and oil will fall, and so will virtually every other commodity.
On October 1, just after the first rate cut the Dow was at 14,147.30, and on June 11, 2008 the Dow was at 12,116.58. That is a drop of 2030 points a drop of 16.9%. So the Fed rate cuts didn't help the stock market.
Wesbury has been saying this all along, and that is what happened.