It’s happened. One widely read financial daily very recently dropped the “D” bomb. The article compared today's economic situation not to the 1987 affair with a happy ending, but to the much “darker metaphor” of the Great Depression in 1929.
The main similarity, according to the article was this: The all-out rescue efforts of the financial powers-that-be to stop a downturn and push the economy onto solid ground. Then as now, two main bodies carry out the task: the central bank and the White House.
1929: The Federal Reserve promises “cheaper credit” and slashes the discount rate from 5.5% (1929) to .75% (1932). At the same time, U.S. President Herbert Hoover creates an “Economic Stimulus Plan” to provide $160 million in tax relief to the public.
2008: On January 22, the Federal Reserve approves an emergency 75-basis-point rate cut, the largest single reduction in 23 years (and fourth cut in four months). Days later, U.S. President George Bush encourages Congress to support a $150 billion “Economic Stimulus” through tax rebates.
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