Zack Subin

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The Great Depression’s housing crash is a classic deflationary spiral, where collapsing prices – in this case, homes – push otherwise solvent, productive people and businesses unnecessarily into default. This is the kind of unforeseeable event that prompts peasant farmers to spread their plots, and to forgo growth and efficiency for stability. In a modern economy, if there is an obvious case for a Keynesian intervention, this is it.
Strong Towns: A Bottom-Up Revolution to Rebuild American Prosperity
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