Too Much Supply, Too Many Brands; Combine with Too Much Credit!". We concluded that low interest rate monetary policy for the auto industry was like handing crack cocaine to a drug addict. The auto industry would rapidly and irresponsibly abuse it, to such an extent that it would once again 'spin out' and careen back to what can only be termed the Washington 'substance abuse center'. Whether mis-management or clever strategy we are unfortunately being proven right and are now witnessing the reality.
The Washington Keynesian planners
mistakenly believe that cheap money still stimulates demand. It
historically did this before it became a legally addicting substance,
but even its original tenet was essentially based on bringing demand
forward. By design this creates a demand hole in the future, but as
Keynes himself famously rationalized: "in the long term we are all dead"
... so not to worry when the economic need is urgent! Setting aside for
a moment this critical structural reality, we need to remember that
cheap credit additionally fosters structural ramifications seldom
elucidated:
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