Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Deleveraging has a long way to go in the U.S. Worse than government borrowing replaces private borrowing, public debt increases and growth slows: Reinhart and Rogoff revisited

"...In John's opinion – and I do not disagree – we are still only in the second or third innings of the de-leveraging process (chart 1). Years of excessive debt accumulation cannot be reversed in 18 months, and it will take at least another 5-6 years to play out, possibly longer.

The other part of John's argument – and again it is hard to disagree – is that it remains an open question how much de-leveraging has in fact taken place. As you can see from chart 2, US sovereign debt has risen as fast as private debt has declined (and the picture is similar in many other countries), providing support for the argument that all we have achieved so far is to move liabilities from private to public balance sheets, effectively burdening tomorrow's taxpayer..."

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