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The final factor depressing long-term living standards is the unwise policy response in the last few months to the credit crunch and the beginnings of global downturn. Throughout the world, but particularly in the United States and Western Europe, governments have resorted to bailouts and "stimulus packages" that have exploded public sector deficits and increased the power of government in the economy. Contrary to popular and journalists' beliefs, these expenditures are not free; they must be borrowed. In a time of tight credit such as we are now experiencing and are likely to continue experiencing for some time to come, that borrowing crowds out other more productive uses of capital. It has been remarked the total cost of bailouts by the Federal Reserve, the Treasury and other public sector authorities approaches that of World War II, corrected for inflation. However, from World War II, we got the jet engine, rocketry and the computer, whereas no significant technological spin-off is likely to result from $600 billion invested by the Fed in redundant home mortgages.
Nevertheless, the probability of a long-term decline in U.S. living standards comparable to if not deeper than the Great Depression must be rated as fairly high. It will take the form, not of a single catastrophic collapse as in 1929-33, but of a series of sharp unpleasant recessions, interspersed with feeble unconvincing recoveries in a downward saw-tooth pattern. The result will be the same, albeit over a longer period. The only saving grace is that the decline will eventually bottom out and be followed by gradual recovery, as global growth continues and the United States shares in it. Even so, this is far from the future Americans have envisioned for themselves.
China Trashes U.S.
In yet another example of China’s enormous influence over the U.S., the worldwide economic downturn has severely decreased China’s demand for recyclable products from the U.S., bringing the industry to a near standstill.
With consumer’s reining in spending, the market for recyclable products continues to decline. Recyclable materials range from car doors to shoe soles to electronic boxes, but without people buying those products there is little need to recycle them. Now, they are piling up and are starting to cost recycling contractors money.
Originally posted by Dbriefed
That's one thing we're good at; sabotaging our own industries for the sake of competitiveness (executive greed).
Originally posted by Dbriefed
I watched as my peers were pushed out of jobs in Silicon Valley, you could hire ten Indian developers for the price of one American engineer, and they were as productive as two Americans.