At this point 15 years ought to count for something. After all, we have now used up one-seventh of this century. So you can’t say its too early to tell what’s going on or to identify the underlying trends.
Indeed, during that span we have encompassed several business cycles, two financial crises/meltdowns and nearly a non-stop blitz of “extraordinary” policy interventions. To wit, a $700 billion TARP, an $800 billion fiscal stimulus, upwards of $4.0 trillion of money printing and 165 months out of 180 months in which interests rates were being cut or held at rock bottom levels.
You’d think with all that help from Washington that American capitalism would be booming with prosperity. No it’s not. On the measures which count when it comes to sustainable growth and real wealth creation, the trends are slipping backwards—– not leaping higher.
So here’s the tally after another “Jobs Friday”. The number of breadwinner jobs in the US economy is still 2 million below where it was when Bill Clinton still had his hands on matters in the Oval Office. Since then we have had two Presidents boasting about how many millions of jobs the have created and three Fed chairman taking bows for deftly guiding the US economy toward the nirvana of “full employment”.
Say what? ........much, much more below
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-04-08/15-years-stimulus-nothing-show
Little doubt that the only reason inflation hasn't gone hog-wild is that the job market basically sucks.
Wages are stagnant, actual jobs that you can hope to pay your bills with are still scarce.
The situation is not good.
The fed has to stop the fiasco and soon. When they do, markets will tumble, the housing market will contract again, taking more jobs with it, and the cycle will repeat itself.
There is no way this stimulus is sustainable and the only reason it's gone on for as long as it has is that they are scared shitless of what will happen when this false support is removed and true market forces take over again. Bernanke got the hell out of dodge because he didn't want to be blamed when it all collapsed and I'd expect an exit from Yellen soon, as the game of hot potato goes on.