From WZZM TV:
West Michigan in a ‘shallow recession,’ GVSU economist says
How shallow it might be is of course wild guesswork, but such is the tightrope walked by financial journalism given the realities of mass psychology. I for one accept that it is in the nature of economies (capitalist and otherwise) to behave cyclically, and that there will never be a last recession. What I can’t forgive is an economic policy framework that insists on reacting to economic conditions instead of planning for them, for example, with countercyclical policies. We allow ourselves a few (but too few) countercyclical tools for financial markets, such as floater bonds, but what we really need badly is some countercyclical tools for labor markets. I would suggest a “floater pool” of civil service employees. Maybe these would be assigned to make-work tasks, and I really don’t care, but dog knows there’s plenty work actually needed by society, that is destined to be undersupplied by the market b/c merit goods or what have you. The floater pool would hire massively during recessions, and (frankly) do mass layoffs during rare times of “labor shortage” such as the (present?/recent past?).
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