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> The only way this ends is either a depression the scales of which we've never seen in history before (which would liquidate and clear out bad businesses), or a hyperinflationary collapse of the U.S. dollar whereby more and more money is injected to prop everything up.

Uh, the latter is not a distinct option from the former.

Also, you've left out: “the government continues as it has for generations, occasionally bailing out out wide sectors of the economy in black swan events with wide impact but mostly letting businesses big and small that are not prudent fail while cushioning some of the impacts of that failure with bankruptcy (both regular rule-based bankruptcy and similar, ad hoc restructuring in special cases; the latter is often also referred to as a ‘bailout’, but is meaningfully distinct from other bailouts.)”




The fact that it has been going on for decades doesn't make the point less valid. This kind of monetary intervention is compounding in nature, and it can be clearly seen as how each financial crash over the past 2-3 decades has been worse than the one before.


> The fact that it has been going on for decades doesn't make the point less valid. This

No, the fact it what you describe has not been going on for decades. It is an occasional response to extreme events, not a continuous mode of operation, and your criticism is all about the potential risk it has as a continuous mode of operation. There've been a couple major cases fairly recently, but that was in response to the biggest financial crisis in 70 years and the most significant acute global pandemic in over a century happening to fall a little over a decade apart, not some change in general approach.




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