About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all short publications by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Type
- Title

SHORT PUBLICATIONS
AEI Newsletter
AEI.org Exclusives
The American
Press Releases
Outlook Series
On the Issues
Papers and Studies
AEI Working Paper Series
Government Testimony
Speeches
Book Reviews
AEI Policy Series
The War on Terror

E-NEWSLETTERS
Enter e-mail:
 

Home >  Short Publications >  A Response to Martin Wolf
A Response to Martin Wolf
Print Mail
Letter to the Editor
By Desmond Lachman
Posted: Friday, October 10, 2008
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Financial Times  
Publication Date: October 8, 2008

Resident Fellow Desmond Lachman  
Resident Fellow
Desmond Lachman
 
At this stage in the economic downturn, it would seem clear that there are two primary forces driving the global economy downwards and giving rise to a series of adverse feedback loops. The first is a vicious process of asset price deflation as exemplified by the more than 20 per cent decline over the past year in US home, equity, and bond prices. This process, which is far from over, has already reduced US household wealth by the equivalent of around 80 percentage points of US GDP. As such, it must be expected to materially impact household consumption expenditure and complicate the banking sector's loan loss problem.

The second force bearing down on the global economy is a virulent process of financial market de-leveraging that is now not simply confined to the banks but that is also engulfing the hedge funds, which are presently experiencing the equivalent of a bank run due to poor performance. As a result, US bank credit is contracting at its fastest pace in the post-war period while the all important securitisation market is in a virtual state of paralysis.

With a deep global recession now all but a certainty, Martin Wolf is correct in asserting that the time for a higgledy-piggledy, institution-by-institution, country-by-country approach is long over. However, it would seem at least in the United States that policy needs to go considerably beyond adequately recapitalizing the banks if the economic recession is not to morph into something even nastier. At a minimum, it would seem that major government intervention is needed to stabilize housing prices and arrest the alarming rate of foreclosure that threaten to further add to bank loan losses. Simultaneously, it would seem that one needs both a second fiscal stimulus package and yet more monetary policy easing to stimulate domestic demand.

Desmond Lachman is a resident fellow at AEI.

Related Links
Related article on the Fed's accommodative policy by Lachman
Related letter to the editor about falling home prices by Lachman
The Cascading Financial Crisis: A Review of Work from the American Enterprise Institute


Also by Desmond Lachman
Recent Articles
We Can't Wait for a New Treasury Secretary
The G-20 Summit Was a Failure
The Honeymoon Is Over before It Begins
Latest Book
Challenges to the Swedish Welfare State
Middle Eastern Outlook

Middle Eastern OutlookIn the latest edition of Middle Eastern Outlook, Michael Rubin questions whether the United States can really deter or contain a nuclear weapons-capable Iran.


How to Fix Medicare
How to Fix Medicare: Let's Pay Patients, Not Physicians

Should Medicare pay for patient expenses the way automobile insurers pay for car-repair bills? In How to Fix Medicare, health economist Roger Feldman argues that a radical shift in Medicare policy is not only possible but imperative.