According to David Stockman author of The Great
Deformation, "We never should have painted
ourselves so deep in this QE corner in the first place… We are already at peak debt and forcing more
into the economy didn't work, and won't work...
and, the private credit channel of monetary transmission is busted."
David Alan Stockman (born November 10, 1946) is
a former U.S. politician and businessman,
serving as a Republican U.S. Representative from the state of Michigan (1977–1981)
and as the Director of the Office of Management and Budget(1981–1985).
Stockman’s reasonably credible thoughts on Keynesian economics:
Even the tepid post-2008 recovery has not been what
it was cracked up to be, especially with respect to the Wall Street presumption
that the American consumer would once again function as the engine of GDP
growth. It goes without saying, in fact, that the precarious plight of the Main
Street consumer has been obfuscated by the manner in which the state’s
unprecedented fiscal and monetary medications have distorted the incoming data
and economic narrative.
These distortions implicate all rungs of the economic
ladder, but are especially egregious with respect to the prosperous classes. In
fact, a wealth-effects driven mini-boom in upper-end consumption has
contributed immensely to the impression that average consumers are clawing
their way back to pre-crisis spending habits. This is not remotely
true.
Five years after the top of the second Greenspan
bubble (2007), inflation-adjusted retail sales were still down by about 2
percent. This fact alone is unprecedented. By comparison, five years after the
1981 cycle top real retail sales (excluding restaurants) had risen by 20
percent.
Likewise, by early 1996 real retail sales were 17
percent higher than they had been five years earlier. And with a fair amount of
help from the great MEW (measurable economic welfare) raid, constant dollar
retail sales in mid-2005 where 13 percent higher than they had been five years
earlier at the top of the first Greenspan bubble.
So this cycle is very different, and even then the
reported five years’ stagnation in real retail sales does not capture the full
story of consumer impairment. The divergent performance of Wal-Mart’s
domestic stores over the last five years compared to Whole Foods points to
another crucial dimension; namely, that the averages are being materially
inflated by the upbeat trends among the prosperous classes.
For all practical purposes Wal-Mart is a proxy for
Main Street America, so it is not surprising that its sales have stagnated
since the end of the Greenspan bubble.
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