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1 HelloDare  Wed, Jul 28, 2010 1:28:54pm

This is the opinion of two economists. From the piece:

Told about the findings, another leading economist was unconvinced.

“I’m very surprised that they find these big impacts,” said John B. Taylor, a Stanford professor and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. “It doesn’t correspond at all to my empirical work.”

Mr. Taylor said the Fed had successfully stabilized the commercial paper and money markets, but he argued that its purchases of $1.25 trillion in mortgage-backed securities have not been effective. And he said the Obama administration’s stimulus program has had “very little impact and not much to show for it except a legacy of higher debt.”

The disagreement underscored the extent to which econometric estimates are heavily reliant on underlying assumptions and models, but Mr. Blinder and Mr. Zandi said they hoped their analysis would withstand scrutiny by other scholars.

2 Jeff In Ohio  Wed, Jul 28, 2010 3:13:47pm

Not surprising. Taylor's a well known critic of deficit spending as the last result of a tanked economy. There's a long list of economist who disagree with him from the "we didn't go far enough crowd" of Krugman and Baker on the left to former McCain advisor Mark Zandi (one of the authors of this study) on the right. One thing they all agree on is that the Bush TARP plan prevented the financial system from crashing and the Obama stimulus delivered as expected and, if these Moody guys are right, prevented an out right depression.

I'm sorry, is anyone out there besides me the son or daughter of depression era parents? My old man, born in 1920, spent his first 11 years growing up on the family farm, and the next 5 helping my grandfather sharecrop 100 acres to buy it back. Yeah, the economy sucks, but what is it the Christians say, there but by the grace of god go I.

3 freetoken  Wed, Jul 28, 2010 3:16:41pm

re: #2 Jeff In Ohio

My father came of age in the Great Depression - a tough time for a young man to venture out into the world. He and 6 of his brothers were essentially saved by WWII - they all went, and they all came back alive (!). They were farm boys so in a sense were employed, but it was a tough time. My mother was born before the Depression and grew up in it - also a farmgirl so at least they had food but it always sounded like it was a rather meager time.

We have it good today.

4 Daniel Ballard  Wed, Jul 28, 2010 4:19:40pm

re: #2 Jeff In Ohio

Arguably this is a depression, albeit with safety nets that they did not have circa 1930. I have found no official delineation between recession and depression. But I do think time will see this recognized as an economic depression, greater in scope than any recession.

5 [deleted]  Wed, Jul 28, 2010 8:12:54pm

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