Dean Baker: Bubbles are Not Funny: The 99% Gets Blasted When They Burst
November 18, 2013
| Paul Krugman tells us [3]
that Larry Summers joined the camp concerned about secular stagnation
in his I.M.F. talk last week, something that I had not picked up from
prior coverage of the session. This is good news, but I would qualify a
few of the points that Krugman makes in his elaboration of Summers'
remarks.
In the case of the housing bubble in particular we saw millions of people lose much or all of their wealth from buying homes at bubble-inflated prices. The loss of housing wealth is especially devastating because housing is a highly leveraged asset even in normal times and it is an asset often held by middle and moderate income households. It was great that the bubble was able to spur growth and get the economy close to full employment, however the subsequent crash was pretty awful. It would be incredibly irresponsible to go through another round like this.
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