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This does not mean that everything is great or that employment has rebounded. It means that these economies are no longer shrinking and posted very small positive growth.
That said, I've always thought that this was an unusual recession that had technical solutions. It was driven almost entirely by the financial sector (with a big boost from the rapacious energy sector). But it was not a classic recession based on "business cycles" and accumulating inventories which require business to shut down production in order to clear them. Nor was it like 1929, which actually was in part a resource driven depression based on hundreds of millions of farmers world wide living in chronic rural poverty pushed into desperation by widesread global drought and crop failure.
There was an underlying mortgage default problem based on real families have real difficulty paying their mortgages (a result of long term stagnant wages and unfair mortgage terms), but this was exacerbated by securitization of mortgages in mortgage backed securities. As former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neil analogized it, it was like a drop of poison in one bottle of bottled water in a store full of bottled water made the entire inventory of bottled water worthless. Tens of billions of defaulted mortgages turned into trillions upon trillions of worthless bank assets.
This was an avoidable economic crisis created by wreckless financial engineering and commodity (energy) speculation -- the perfect economic crisis to punctuate the end of the era of George W. Bush, an era of unbridled greed and unleashed mega-incompetence.
Despite the fact that this crisis was caused by the financial sector, solving the financial crisis went a long way to solving the recession. Now it's time to make sure these idiots are not allowed to cause anything like this again.
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