An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
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Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Household net worth probably up by $3 to $4 trillion in Q2
In the past two years (ending Q1 2009) household net worth took a massive hit--down $14 trillion according to data from the Federal Reserve.
Household net worth (market value) Q2 2007: $64.3 trillion
Household net worth (market value) Q1 2009: $50.4 trillion
The public has experienced the largest wealth decline since the Great Depression.
That's the bad news...
The good news is, household net worth probably recovered by $3 to $4 trillion in the second quarter of this year. The reason is, the bounce back in the stock market, which added about $2 trillion and the greater holdings of Treasuries (an asset) by the public. Treasury holdings of the public have increased almost $2 trillion over the past two years.
We still have a long way to go to get back to $64 trillion, however, the recovery of some household wealth is not a bad thing.
If gov't keeps deficit spending (adding assets to the non-governmental sector) and confidence can be bolstered, we could recover a good portion of what we lost in a fairly short order because we still have all the productive physical and human capital of the nation on hand and ready to go.
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