“The duration of the slump may be
much more prolonged than most people are expecting and much will be changed
both in our ideas and in our methods before we emerge. Not, of course, the
duration of the acute phase of the slump, but that of the long, dragging
conditions of semi-slump, or at least sub-normal prosperity, which may be
expected to succeed the acute phase.”
- John
Maynard Keynes, writing in 1931, and cited by former BoE Monetary Policy
Committee member Danny Blanchflower at a recent investment conference.
“The
government borrowed £163.4 billion in the past financial year, the worst level
of borrowing in Britain’s peacetime history..”
-
Financial
Times article of 22nd April 2010.
Or, as Rogoff and Reinhart put it, financial crises are long-drawn-out affairs and their aftermath, unlike that from a
volcanic ash cloud, tends to linger dangerously, for years rather than months. Pimco
have made similar observations about the likely medium term impact on the
western economies with their ongoing reference to a “new normal” that is likely
to display distinctly sub-par growth and the dead hand of increased government
intervention. Facing significant but as yet intangible crisis, human nature is
not helpful. We can only stand so much grief, and then sunny optimism kicks in,
whatever the objective reality. Another problem is the mob-like status of modern
communications. The Internet has given a voice to millions with nothing to say.
Finding meaningful and relevant (investible) signals within the relentless barrage
of cretinous noise is an ever-growing challenge.
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