Sunday, February 22, 2009

Economic View - Can Talk of a Depression Lead to One? - News Analysis - NYTimes.com

According to the Reuters-University of Michigan Survey of Consumers earlier this month, nearly two-thirds of consumers expected that the present downturn would last for five more years. President Obama, in his first press conference, evoked the Depression in warning of a “negative spiral” that “becomes difficult for us to get out of” and suggested the possibility of a “lost decade,” as in Japan in the 1990s.

He said Congress needed to pass an economic stimulus package — as it ultimately did — to prevent this calamity.

The attention paid to the Depression story may seem a logical consequence of our economic situation. But the retelling, in fact, is a cause of the current situation — because the Great Depression serves as a model for our expectations, damping what John Maynard Keynes called our “animal spirits,” reducing consumers’ willingness to spend and businesses’ willingness to hire and expand. The Depression narrative could easily end up as a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Economic View - Can Talk of a Depression Lead to One? - News Analysis - NYTimes.com
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