
Research is part and parcel of my new job and as I was researching in the world wide web, I stumbled upon this article on the Wall Street Journal website where there was an article on the improvement of the US economy. In that, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Dennis Lockhart said that in overall, the U.S. economy is improving but still fragile. He also said that the he was confident that we (America) will return to a sustainable fiscal path but it would be unwise to be “Panglossian” or naively optimistic about the whole financial state.
In another article I found that the Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, in his prepared testimony for Congress’ Joint Economic Committee had said that among the enormous costs of the downturn is the loss of some 5 million payroll jobs over the past 15 months. However experts predict that job losses and the unemployment rates will come to a sustainable level. Obama’s government is undergoing a tough, challenging phase and they are working on this, so let us give them some credit for their planned bail-outs.
So my question to Mr. Lockart is “Why not?”
Why not we stay Panglossian?
With a slow and steady resurgence in various sectors like manufacturing, real estate and every thing else, this the time when we can actually breathe a bit easy. America is a great country with the largest economy in the world and also by PPP. To top it all, we have the second highest income per hour worked in the world. Everything is close to perfect so why are we being so frugal?
The world is not coming to an end. This is the time of economic re-birth world wide. I am beginning feel that the recession is becoming more of a mind thing than of a money thing. Let’s cut the recession drama down a bit and try and stay a bit more optimistic. Panglossian, maybe.
PS: The word Panglossian derives from Pangloss, the optimistic tutor in Voltaire’s Candide.
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