Friday, August 27, 2010

When Will The Economy Turn Around ?

During long periods of financial prosperity, people feel optimistic and are confident their income will continue to increase. So they are eager to borrow money to buy stuff now rather than having to wait. Even with moderate inflation, there is a feeling that prices will be higher in the future, so it is better to buy now.

But when the economy turns around and people start to lose their jobs or have to take big pay cuts, they quickly adopt an opposite attitude toward the future. They are not confident they can repay more debt in the future or that prices will increase. So they start to reduce their debts and to accumulate assets by cutting way back on every kind of discretionary expense.

At the same time, the banks, credit card companies and other lenders that have been overly eager to extend credit begin to adopt a far more conservative practice about making further loans. So even if people want to borrow, there is less money available.

The government sees this as a bad thing because this kind of behavior will put more downward pressure on prices and will lead to less buying and therefore to more business failures and to more unemployment. Voters get angry. Politicians worry about being voted out of office. So they jump on the stimulus bandwagon and agree to use borrowed money to prime the economic pump and to bail out businesses that are deemed "too big to fail".

The stimulus and bailouts provide a lot of people with money but it does not cause people to feel optimistic about the future. Businesses with non-essential goods and services continue to suffer and go broke, adding to the unemployment statistics.

To a large extent, the bailouts, stimulus and extended unemployment benefits simply delay the point when the excesses of the earlier financial bubble are gone, when businesses that have survived are lean and mean and when the unemployed are willing to accept jobs that are far less lucrative than the ones they enjoyed during the boom times. And everyone except the government has been reducing their debt or accumulating savings.

Gradually, businesses begin to rebuild their inventories and some entrepreneurs embark on new ventures that require them to hire some of the unemployed. Little by little, pessimism and fear give way to cautious optimism and the economy begins to recover. But the more the government continues to intervene, the longer it will take.

Just my two cents.

Vern
www.vernonjaccobs.com

1 comment:

  1. Japan's lost decade may be a good example of the effect of delaying tactics.

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