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In "NBER's
Martin Feldstein Bashes The Deplorable US Economy, Says Bernanke Has
Engineered Another Stock Bubble," Zero Hedge
highlights some less-than-upbeat commentary from a Bloomberg TV interview with
economist Martin Feldstein:
Feldstein on
the U.S. economy:
"We are not doing very well.
The economy is just coming along at a snail's pace. The first quarter numbers
that we just got last week were not very good at all. The GDP number was
2.2%. That was a disappointment, but you know, it was all automobiles. 1.6
out of the 2.2 was motor vehicle production. So, people were catching up
after not being able to buy them the year before. So, this is a very weak
economy. The payroll employment numbers, we are going to get some new ones in
April. Let's hope they are better than March where it fell by half. The stock market is, I think,
responding to the Fed. I think the real danger is that this is a bubble in
the stock market created by low long-term interest rates that the Fed has
engineered."
On the danger
of a bubble in the stock market:
"The danger is, like all bubbles, they
burst at some point. Remember, Ben Bernanke told us in the
summer of 2010 that he was going to do QE2 and then ultimately they did
Operation Twist. The purpose of that was to make long-term bonds less
attractive so that investors would buy into the stock market. That would raise wealth and higher
wealth would lead to more consumption. It helped in the
fourth quarter of 2010 and maybe that is what is helping to drive consumption
during the first quarter of this year. But
the danger is you get a market that is not with the reality of what is
happening in the economy, which is, as I said a moment ago, is really not
very good at all."
I'll be danged
-- another economist (see: "No
Punches Pulled") who is not afraid to speak the
truth.
If this keeps
up, you won't need little old me any more.
Michael J. Panzner
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