Will Hutton: You are warning that what happened to Japan could happen to the whole world. Japan's GDP at the end of this year will be no higher than it was in 1992 - 17 lost years. You are saying that this is an ongoing risk, certainly for the North Atlantic economy - maybe the world economy.
Paul Krugman: Yes. It's not that the risk of the Japan syndrome has receded very much. The risk of a full, all-out Great Depression - utter collapse of everything - has receded a lot in the past few months. But this first year of crisis has been far worse than anything that happened in Japan during the last decade, so in some sense we already have much worse than anything the Japanese went through. The risk for long stagnation is really high.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Paul Krugman singlehandedly makes everyone start buying sacks of rice and beans
And deciding where to dig the bunker....
Labels:
Depression,
Economic Collapse,
Economy,
Global Economy,
Japan,
Liquidity Trap,
Paul Krugman,
Stagnation
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2 comments:
my bunker is in Tahiti (which is french)
Hey! No fair!
Well... global warming will put those islands under very soon anyway. But it's hard to decide whether fighting off neighbors for food or treading water is more appealing....
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