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| Shock Therapy for the Housing Market | | Print | |
| Written by Michael Tennant | ||||||||||
| Tuesday, 07 September 2010 16:30 | ||||||||||
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Housing sales in July were down 26 percent over July 2009. Now, says the newspaper, “there is a growing sense of exhaustion with government intervention. Some economists and analysts are now urging a dose of shock therapy that would greatly shift the benefits to future homeowners: Let the housing market crash.” When prices are lower, these experts argue, buyers will pour in, creating the elusive stability the government has spent billions upon billions trying to achieve. Even the National Association of Realtors, which pushed for a housing tax credit last year, isn’t asking for more housing-market stimulus. All attempts to emerge from the crisis by new interventionist measures are completely misguided. There is only one way out of the crisis: Forego every attempt to prevent the impact of market prices on production. Give up the pursuit of policies which seek to establish interest rates, wage rates and commodity prices different from those the market indicates. The Times is, therefore, nearly 80 years late to the do-nothing party — but better late than never. Trackback(0)
Comments (6)
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Doug
said:
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Could, Should, and Won't I completely agree with your analysis and conclusion... ...and it'll never happen. There's no way the government is EVER going to take a "hands off" approach, even as it becomes increasingly obvious that that's exactly what they should do (and should have done already). "Passive" politicians are seen (or so they believe) as weak politicians, and since their only mandate in life is to keep getting reelected, they will keep picking at the scab until there's a permanent scar. Or the patient bleeds to death. What politicians could do and should do is usually a certain indication of what they won't do. They will step back and let the housing market correct when the Senate freezes over and Congressmen can fly. |
Andrew
said:
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... I agree with Doug - it will never happen because voters are too impatient and out of touch with reality to accept that doing nothing may be the best solution. Instead, they want politicians that come up with instant solutions, even if it means creating another bubble economy and risking any recovery we may have already experienced. It's frustrating to anyone able to see the bigger picture, because as a result we hear more people placing blame on specific individuals instead of what is obviously a corrupt system. |
william
said:
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Free the Housing Market!! And don't forget that the main culprit for the mess was the invention of securitized mortgage financial products which turn the whole market into a casino. Until we force banks back into the fundamental purposes of responsible banking we are doomed to repeat this miserable cycle and undermine our great nation's vitality. |
Alan
said:
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Wrong, Aaron. Back to school for you... Capitalism as you and I have known it is a fraudulent imitation of free-enterprise, free-market economics. For more than a century and a half the power of government has been abused into interfering with markets -- creating monopolies, crushing free-market competition, manipulating the value of currency. This is a sham version of "capitalism." As Mr. Tennant has pointed out, it is gov't INTERVENTION that is the problem, not "capitalism." I don't know that we've ever had, or ever will have, a "pure" capitalist system, and don't believe we'd avoid every problem of inequity and injustice in such a system. But you, for one, need to become better informed about the nature of our present difficulties. Economic disaster has (nearly) always been the result of gov't-abetted interference and manipulation, not the result of unfettered markets seeking their own equilibrium in the allocation of wealth and resources. (Consider, e.g., the role of central banks in creating these market bubbles). Finally, I think you have the wrong address. You thought you were dropping stink bombs on the Rush Limbaugh show, but your aim was off. You won't find too many "Neo-cons" around these parts, few defenders of "Faux News" or of Bush policies, whether Sr. or Jr -- at least not from me. I'm an equal-opportunity defender of Constitutional gov't against all pretenders. |
SamGan
said:
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Right on the money, Alan! Whenever I read someone d**ning capitalism, I have many of the same thoughts you expressed... ...but you write them so much better than I could! Kudos! |





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