“It’s the Money, Stupid”

“At the moment, Republican leaders and policy elites are advancing exclusively fiscal solutions that address only the government response to the economic crisis and not the crisis itself. Fiscal deficits did not create the crisis, and reducing deficits wonโ€™t put our economy on a stable footing. From its inception in 2007 right up to the…

“At the moment, Republican leaders and policy elites are advancing exclusively fiscal solutions that address only the government response to the economic crisis and not the crisis itself. Fiscal deficits did not create the crisis, and reducing deficits wonโ€™t put our economy on a stable footing. From its inception in 2007 right up to the present, the crisis derived from the interaction between excessive investment leverage and dysfunctional interest-rate policyโ€”in other words, a predominantly monetary phenomenon, albeit one that has had grave fiscal consequences.ย 

As long as the GOP enjoys the luxury of being the only alternative to Barack Obama and the Democrats, the party is understandably reluctant to delve into the murky depths of monetary policy. But after November 2, the Republicansโ€™ role will change. They could do worse than pay attention to the only public official, elected or unelected, who is speaking out against current monetary policy, telling anyone who will listenโ€”including an increasingly impatient Tea Party movementโ€”that the root of the crisis is monetary.” Read more.ย 

“It’s the Money, Stupid”ย 
Jeffrey Bell and Sean Fielerย 
The Weekly Standard, October 9, 2010, Vol. 16, No. 5.ย 

Image by Francesco Marino / FreeDigitalPhotos.net.



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