Again from the New York Times, ``Administration officials committed to flood the financial system with as much as $2.5 trillion — $350 billion of that coming from the bailout fund and the rest from private investors and the Federal Reserve, making use of its ability to print money."
The $2.5 trillion Geithner plan...
Obviously, the US government's approach in resolving the unsustainable debt problem is to do the same, pile on more debts.
So far, the US government commitments have reached nearly $8.8 trillion and spent $2 trillion according to the New York Times and the Geithner plan and the latest stimulus package should add to this.
And Prudent Bear's Doug Noland has nailed it in his article (bold highlights mine) , ``The Government Finance Bubble is being called upon to reflate with little assistance from private Credit, while at the same time it is faced with a Deeply Maladjusted Economic Structure still overly dependent upon inflationary Credit expansion. Throwing mega-Trillions at our distorted economy is just asking for trouble.
``It is in this context that I fear that the Trillions of Government Finance spent to save the world from “deflation” will, in the end, require perpetual needs for Trillions more. There will be no kick-starting asset Bubbles or a return of private-sector Credit excess. Instead, it will be a case of throwing repeated doses of government-directed finance/purchasing power at the system. Temporary but fleeting economic boosts will then require only stronger doses of artificial stimulus.
``We’ve commenced a new cycle dominated by government electronic printing presses in all their various forms. The inflationary consequences will be a different variety than we’ve grown accustomed to from previous reflations. But the bottom line is – and there’s ample history to support this view – that once the “printing presses” get humming along it’s going to be darn difficult to slow them down."
Overall, a policy of inflation begets more inflation.
And that's where we are likely headed for. But don't count on a benign outcome.
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