BuckeyeJim
King
Yes, they very much are. They want to manipulate it for their own benefit. More to the point, the libertarian mindset has certain prejudices about how economies work. And that is what causes the problem. Greenspan is very much a libertarian. And that is the reason why he was so wrong. He believed things about the economy that simply were not true. And because of that he acted in ways that were horrendously dangerous.
Not true. That's why the Fed is independent. The Fed has a long history of not doing what the government wants. That's why Reagan replaced Volker with Greenspan.
People are only mistrustful out of ignorance and the propaganda it spreads.
Volker did not 'wreck the economy'. He engineered a recession to bring inflation under control. It wasn't pretty, but it was necessary. In the long run the inflation at that rate would have been worse.
Hmmmm, I dunno Cutlass. You say that people are mistrustful out of ignorance and the propaganda it spreads. But in the same breath you explain how Volcker "engineered a recession", talk about how Reagan got rid of Volcker for political reasons, then talk about how awful Greenspan's policies were! You've previously talked about how Greenspan's monetary policy led to the housing bubble as well. Fed malfeasance and abuse spanning FOUR DECADES! This does not sound like ignorance, nor propaganda. This sounds to me like tangible hard facts. We're talking about why people distrust the fed, and you go on to talk about Fed actions that you yourself don't like and hit on talking points that make you distrust people like Greenspan. But then you try to impugn others, in an out of hand manner mind you, of only distrusting the fed based upon ignorance and propaganda, pretending like they couldn't possibly have a justifiable answer for not trusting the fed. Seems double-standardish to me. I mean, why on earth would people distrust an institution that purposefully engineers an economy into recession and renders them unemployed or unable to buy a house? Which reminds me, wasn't it you who said that I needed to stay put in my cramped apartment so that people who couldn't afford their mortgages could be subsidized by myself and others like me so they could stay in their homes? Why would people be any more distrustful of bankers in 2010 who engineered a bubble that caused a recession than people in Washington directly engineering recessions and killing their quality of life? You defend an overt, purposeful, fiat economic deflation in one era, yet today you will not defend much needed economic deflation to normalize various commodity prices. You're basically saying that it was okay for governments to raise interest rates via fiat so that people like my parents couldn't afford homes, and now you're saying that it's okay for governments to artificially boost home values so people like me can't afford homes. Just perplexing.
Libertarians aren't in the business of manipulation. They are like socialists, communists, or anarchists. They have an established ideology that is based on morals. They view the world through a lens that they wish to see applied across the entire breadth of society and believe that their ideologies would result in a betterment of all society on some basis. While Libertarian policies may certainly help some, and hurt others, it is by no means an ideological stance that is steeped in only benefiting a few people any more than socialism or communism is. Greenspan was certainly not a libertarian in action. I think it would be an extreme stretch to find a Libertarian who believes in monetarism, fiat currency, and targeted inflation rates. Much less the kind of monetarism that Greenspan used to, quite literally, engineer the economy and try to keep us floating through the 2000s after the tech bubble burst. Greenspans hands in the innards of the economy directly led to a number negative economic consequences, you admitted so. This is not emblematic of laissez faire economics forwarded by Libertarians.
By an order of magnitude. From 1800 or so until the Great Depression, the US had a very serious economic crisis or depression more often than we have had mild recessions between 1945 and 2008. There is no comparison in how much better off we are.