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The Economic Meltdown: What Have We Learned, if Anything?
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The Economic Meltdown: What Have We Learned, if Anything?
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The U.S. has had more than 70 years to come to terms with the Great Depression, and we really thought we knew how to avoid another one, says Paul Krugman. “It wasn’t supposed to be possible. Then came the current crisis.”So how to explain the Great Recession of 2008? Krugman suggests a combination of factors: First, he thinks we “mislearned” some of the lessons of the Crash. We developed an “unwarranted belief that it was easy for the …Federal Reserve to prevent the crisis.” We forgot how difficult it is to get “policy traction” when financial markets are really unstable, and conveniently overlooked how things had “gone awry in the past” when we deregulated the banks in more recent years. We grew too literal-minded in our notion of banks, imagining “a big marble building with a row of counters, with Jimmy Stewart,” when in fact, we’d created new institutions that used deposits to make innovative but sometimes disastrous investments. We didn’t immediately recognize the 21st-century version of bank runs, which didn’t involve mobs in the street but “investors refusing to roll over their repos.”

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Business
Economics
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