Jeff-
I really don't see the validity of your argument/rant and this coming from myself who has 18y of economics/finance experience in the trenches--sorry I'm not a mainstreet business owner, but I've studied everything from Milton Friedman to rational expectations theory and I deal everyday with professionals who manage billions of $$$. It is easy to blame Wall St. for what ills. But let me give you my take- Comparing anything to the Great Depression or cures to the economic ills of that time period is akin to trying to find out who really is responsible for Merion.. It is a waste of time to some degree b/c this is not 75 years ago. Humans are always trying to build models to forecast the future and using the past as a guide (every wonder why these models break down a lot and then one hears the all too human excuse--i digress).
This is not the Great Depression and the world is a much different place. This country is now the reserve currency holder (wasnt in the depression, sterling was), for one. Two, the US has lost 1/3rd of its manufacturing base ceded to China who devalued their currency by 50pct in the late 90s in order to build a manufacturing base and move millions of people into the cities from the rural areas. Most of the US work force that lost those jobs--blue collar types then went into housing jobs which was a boom created by Congress and Greenspan into a bubble. That bubble has burst but the real cause of the unemployment was sewn by China's move in the 90s. Now the US could have went protectionist then or changed economic policies but we did not, hindsight is 20/20.
A new stimulus package? For what reason? This country has more debt than anyone understands. If you add in Social Security and the debt owned by Fannie and Freddie which the government likes to not say it is directly responsible for that our Total Debt to GDP is astronomical. Paul Krugman is the main proponent of further stimulus and what they call quantitative ease. Because he won the Nobel Prize, many think his credibility is great, he also studied Japan indepth which has had a lost 20 years due to a collapse of land prices and failed monetary/fiscal policy. I can assure you Japan has more stimulus packages than bunkers at Oakmont and it has done nothing for them except add debt. Japan though has a trade surplus, rapidly declining population and a much great egalitarian ethos than we do in America. It also will eventually go bankrupt or inflate away its debt if it can find a way to do that. Japan is going poor very slowly, which is what will happen to America.
I digress, ah Krugman, more stimulus. The theory goes, more stimulus will help the patient (economy recover) and then when things are perculating nicely, ah yes, then lets tackle the deficit. But you see that will never happen, because all a stimulus package does is borrow future demand and bring it forward to the present. When you have a massive de-leveraging which is what the housing bust is, it takes many years to work its way thru the system. And all stimulus packages do is like methadone, keep the patient addicted to something.
What bothers me is this? No body wants to do the right thing. The government won’t do the truly free market or Ludvig Von Mises (Austrian school) solution. Take the hit, go bankrupt and start over. The economy would recover much much faster instead of this long drawn out death. I mean seriously, on a micro level, if you are in debt with not enough income to service it, what do you do? You go bankrupt and start over, you don’t go borrow more and keep doing that in the hopes you hit the lottery or get a great new job and can service the debt. Sure that works if the overall debt level is low, but not when it is uber high like our country’s is.
I could spell out what I think are the right solutions but suffice to say this is what is going on. Currently the government is going to create lots of inflation (often the resort of heavily indebted countries) thru printing money, if the Obama administration does more fiscal stimulus, well we print more money. All this eventually does is kill the US Dollar and imports inflation. Guess what we import, OIL and other commodities? The prices of these goods go up (and don’t get me started on Peak Oil or how exogeneous demand by China/India is going to exacerbate this) and the middle class gets flamed—unless of course demand falls. Does anyone here know how much the agricultural business is levered to cheap oil? Hugely, and that feeds in to food price inflation as well.. Want to see a scary world, imagine a $ worthless like the Weinmar republic and inflation high in this country with double digit unemployment? We’ll see change quickly thru martial law or riots (and I’m not trying to go Michael Savage here).
There is no easy solution, pain is the only given and politicians won’t talk about that with the exception of Mr. Cameron in the UK who is not really conservative to an American, at best in this country he’d be a centrist—one needs to understand the Tories in the UK are way to the left of republicans here.
I could go into micro/macro economics if people wanted with a historical background or into Tuco-speak but Pat is right about clubs in trouble. Sure after the economy broke in 2008 people initially took a hit then the shot of methadone helped the golf biz in 2009. But the longer this goes on and real incomes go down, will you want to pay that hefty subscription annually?