Bloomberg asks an important question in an article below.
-Can the World Economy Break Its Addiction to Stimulus?
It’s a good start but they should also ask a follow up question….”How Will Anyone Repay The Debt Associated With Massive Imbalances Those Economies Have Accumulated”.
Unfortunately, at this juncture no economy can break it’s reliance on easy credit and/or stimulus without suffering the consequences of a severe recession. Such is the nature of the beast or the nature of credit addiction. The economy you see today is a shell of what it should be……it is nothing but a highly distorted entity where most capital has been miss allocated towards speculation.
There are only two ways out of this mess. First, is to let the market correct and for the defaults/imbalances to cascade throughout the economy. It will be a very tough time, but we will be able to come out of it stronger. At the same time, the FED will never let this happen.
The other option is currency debasement, inflation and an eventual war. While the FEDs have been trying to get inflation going over the last decade, thus far they have been unsuccessful, due to a number of deflationary forces within the economy. That will change after 2017. Our mathematical and timing work shows that they will be successful in getting the inflation going after 2017….accelerating it into 2030’s. And that’s the worst thing that can happen.
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Will The US Economy Be Able To Function Without Stimulus? The Answer Will Shock You. Google
Bloomberg: Can the World Economy Break Its Addiction to Stimulus?
The world economy is a stimulus addict. This year it’s going cold turkey.
In China, keeping growth on track for the past five years has required ever larger injections of credit. The ratio of private-sector debt to GDP pushed over 200 percent in the first quarter of 2014, up from about 125 percent at the end of 2008.
That presents China President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang with an unpalatable choice. China’s new leaders could cap loans and face a sharp slowdown in growth, or they could continue on the credit binge and risk a financial crisis. So far the choice has been option No. 1.
In Japan, the bursting of the credit bubble in 1989 left corporations saddled with debt and unwilling to spend. To prevent a lost decade turning into a permanent coma, the government was forced to rack up enormous debts. In 2013, an Abenomics spending splurge to kick-start the economy added to the debt load.
With public debt at 237 percent of GDP, Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe faced a choice no more palatable than that facing China’s leaders. Raising taxes threatened to strangle the infant recovery in its cradle. Continuing to borrow risked a sovereign debt crisis that would make Greece’s recent problems look like the first act of a larger tragedy.
Abe’s solution for 2014 is a compromise. A hike in the consumption tax—the first since 1997—will be offset by higher public spending. Even that threatens to stop Japan’s recovery in its tracks. GDP in the world’s No. 3 economy is expected to contract at a 3.4 percent annualized rate in the second quarter.
Worse could be to come. If Tokyo wants to avoid a debt apocalypse, a budget deficit of more than 8 percent of GDP has to swing into surplus. That’s tough to do without taking a serious chunk out of growth.
In the U.S., meanwhile, exiting an extraordinary period of monetary stimulus is proving less easy than entering it did. The U.S. housing market—a key contributor to the recovery—is hooked on low rates. Even a modest percentage-point increase in mortgage costs in the past year has caused tremors. New home sales fell to an 8-month low in March.
The U.S. housing market is not the only one to suffer. With the cost of credit low, emerging markets from South America to East Asia became accustomed to capital inflows. In the years after the 2008 financial crisis, that buoyed stock prices and fueled a boom in real estate. As rates in the U.S. start to rise, emerging markets have been roiled by sudden reversals in capital flows twice in the past year.
Past stimulus in the world’s three largest economies had a purpose. Massive loan growth in China and close to zero rates in the U.S. eased the pain of the 2008 financial crisis. In Japan, the government had to keep borrowing to offset the impact of corporate saving. Still, even well-intentioned stimulus can’t go on forever. As policymakers in Beijing, Tokyo, and D.C. are discovering, breaking the stimulus habit is tough to do.