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Put Away the Wish List, and Help Households Bounce Back

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Peter Bernstein's says it is vital to address the household sector that is the root of the problem. And the only way to do this effectively is to change the terms of the mortgages themselves and stop the flow of foreclosures, with the government taking on some of the losses from these changes in the mortgage terms. First, he says, thats where the crisis has originated. Second, in the previous recessions the household sector was not the problem, in this one it is the problem. Without returning it to better health, America cannot reverse the devastating course of this recession. Households are the primary customers of American business, and the wave of foreclosures, dropping house prices and job losses, destroy the optimism and morale of millions of Amrericans. "The risk here is not just humanitarian. Indeed the risk is also the preservation of the social structure of democracy and the future progress of America, " says Bernstein. Essentially Bernstein is saying that President Obama should put campaign promises for health care reform, and other agenda after addressing this issue. Obama has extended unemployment insurance as afirst step, he has responded to Detroit's auto industry needs, and has set up the stimulus package. But in the household sector and on mortgages the response has ben weak, thus letting this problem grow and leaving the roots of the crisis unattended. "To intervene promptly, directly and powerfully to counter the home price debacle" has not happened. Something that the New York Times has repeatedly stated in its editorials, including one last week. And without this hope and optimism is not likely to be built on firm ground. A sudden recovery in the stock markets, as in the 2nd quarter 2009, cannot substitute.

The views and wisdom of Peter Bernstein.

03/30/2008

Peter Bernstein who turned 90, has watched financial markets from the fifties as they recovered from the war and depression. He sees little reassurance from looking at the past and thinking that "the seas will be flat again." He thinks its vital that President Obama tackle the household sector and mortgages first, with forceful action to stop foreclosures by government intervention and compulsory mortgage modification.

Grouped Articles

When the Long View Isn’t So Scenic

New York Times 03/30/2008

One Guy Who Has Seen It All Doesn't Like What He Sees Now

Wall Street Journal 04/26/2008

Put Away the Wish List, and Help Households Bounce Back

New York Times 11/09/2008

How a Modern Depression Might Look -- If the U.S. Gets There

Wall Street Journal 03/30/2009

Peter L. Bernstein, Explainer of Risks of Stocks, Dies at 90

New York Times 06/08/2009

A Year After a Cataclysm, Little Change on Wall St.

New York Times 09/12/2009


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