Yet
another stark warning
The
next Great Depression will destroy civilization as we know it, warns
author
The
risk of a new depression — a sustained, severe recession — has
struck fear into the heart of markets and driven monetary policy in
developed economies since the current financial crisis began'
CNBC,
15
July, 2012
.
“We’re
in a very unfortunate position to be here,” Richard Duncan, author
of The New Depression, warned on CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe”
Monday.
“When
we broke the link between money and gold, this removed all
constraints on credit creation. This explosion of credit created the
world we live in, but it now seems that credit cannot expand any
further because the private sector is incapable of repaying the debt
it has already, and if credit begins to contract, there’s a very
real danger that we will collapse into a new Great Depression,” he
argued.
“If
this credit bubble pops, the depression could be so severe that I
don’t think our civilization could survive it.”
The
explosion in cheap credit has been widely blamed for the global
financial crisis, but the debate about how to fix the problem
continues.
In
the past few years, central banks including the U.S. Federal Reserve
, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England have pumped
liquidity into their financial systems through a number of ways,
including quantitative easing and the ECB’s long-term refinancing
operation (LTRO).
“We
could keep deferring the depression, but that could just encourage
the bad guys. If you do this, you possibly do more harm than good,”
Roger Nightingale, economist and strategist at RND Associates, told
CNBC Monday.
“You
can defer, but not prevent.”
Nightingale
argued that previous credit booms, for example in Japan in the 1980s,
have led to sustained recessions.
“When
you throw money into the system at a rate much in excess of the
requirements of the real economy, you’re trying to get people to
borrow and spend, but the good guys out there won’t because they’re
too cautious. It’s the bad guys who come in, the malefactors,” he
said.
“When
the central banks realize what is going on and raise interest rates,
it flings the world economy into depression.”
The
ideas of Milton Friedman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist who
argued that monetary policy should constantly expand, informed some
of the Fed’s response to the crisis.
“Policymakers
really believe that if we allow credit to contract, we will reach a
new Depression,” Duncan said.
“The
increase in government debt is making total debt grow, otherwise we
would already have collapsed in to a debt-deflation death spiral.
This creates great perils, but also tremendous opportunities.”
Duncan
argues that governments in the developed world should borrow
“massive” amounts of money at the current low interest rates to
invest in new technologies like renewable energy and genetic
engineering.
“Even
if this is wasted, at least we could enjoy this civilization for
another ten years before it collapses,” he said.
His
views counter those of economists who believe that governments should
focus on cutting their debt, particularly where repayments on that
debt are threatening to reach unsustainable levels, like in Greece.
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