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Sorry I blew
yesterday’s Jeremy Grantham link, now fixed. MARRIAGE
IN 30 SECONDS Pass this on to your (mostly older)
friends and relatives who are uncomfortable at the thought of granting civil
marriage to same sex couples. It could melt their hearts. (Anybody
have Miss
California’s email?) FIXING FLORIDA - II
FALSE HOPE Yesterday I asked: If False Hope Is
Self-Fulfilling IS It False? It certainly wasn’t in 1981, when
Ronald Reagan rode into office. Back then interest rates were 15%,
inflation 18%, and unemployment in double digits as well. Anyone who
understood the situation knew (or at least I thought I knew) it was
hopeless. If the Fed tightened money and credit to fight inflation,
unemployment would soar still higher. If it eased money and credit,
inflation would go through the roof. Disaster either way.
“Don’t worry! Be happy! It’ll be fine.”
said our new President (more or less). And people – not fully
understanding the box we were in – calmed down and started acting
as though things would be okay . . . and that helped make things
okay. (Ample doses of tax cuts and deficit spending helped prime the
pump.) Now comes a new President who radiates
competence and calm, making clear that we’ll do what we need to to get
the job done (which I believe we will) . . . telling the truth, no
less (things will get worse before they get better; not everything we try will
work) . . . and it is having a positive impact, as it should. The
difference is that when Reagan took over, the National Debt was 30% of GDP, so
he had plenty of room to take on more debt. As Obama takes over, the debt
is more like 90% of GDP, so the situation is more precarious. It’s not a matter simply of weathering a bad recession
and then going back to business as usual. We need to transform our
economy into something leaner, more efficient, more competitive, more
sustainable; saving and producing more, consuming less. It will make us more prosperous than ever – but not before
we go through some pretty wrenching, extended readjustments. How the stock market gyrates along the way . . . well, as noted yesterday, smart people disagree.
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