During the rise of the US housing bubble, people pointed out similarities to Japan but the experts kept saying that it was "different" here.
In some ways, I feel like we are doomed to repeat many of the same mistakes.
Our energy policy was written by Ken Lay. I'm sure he's lovely in person. He also sells dead animals on ebay, as though they were alive. I would rather not go through the parrot sketch every time I want to by gasoline.
I said, here on HN, that the bank bailout wouldn't fix anything. I said that it was a temporary move to slow the collapse of the economy, while people figured out something better. I think this is the something better.
This article seems to be about how japan built a bunch of boondoggles to stimulate the economy... I don't think that's what's happening. The worst of the stimulus package, money for movies, still creates a ton of jobs now. right now. If you look at studios, one hit is all it takes to make all that money back. California is so bad off, they aren't paying back overpaid taxes.
Sorry for the rant, but this seems so far from how the money will be spent. It's not marina's in Oklahoma, it's replacing govt. cars with more fuel efficient versions.
Ah well. I guess none of us really have a say in the matter anyway.
At some point in the future, things get back to normal, but now you have a whole bunch of new roads and nicer schools that were built when things were a bit cheap.
And as an added side effect, you put a lot of money into circulation, which should lead to more purchasing and spending, which will reactivate the economy.
The train system in the U.S for example, should be upgraded. I've seen videos of some cities, and they really looked almost 3rd world - such places should be invested in.
However, having been to Japan, I can say that, along with all the "waste" in rural areas, they have a genuinely better transport infrastructure than the US. Now, with the advent of telecommuting, maybe that looks less important. But extensive high-speed and local rail are fantastic for business; they literally carry customers straight to you in a way that requires less volition on the part of consumers than driving does.
Also briefly mentioned in the article is that the US infrastructure has not been as well-maintained; a lot of this money is hardly "stimulus" but just necessary work that's been put off.
To even make an educated guess is hard. This is an unpopular thing but its time people realize if you want to help, save your money in a higher interest savings account (ingdirect is what I use), keep working, and never let anyone make you feel bad for the job you have. All work even the lowliest of McDonalds jobs is honorable. Also avoid all loans possible, keep living in that apartment, keep driving the beater and cut the credit cards now.
The problem is identifying what will create a long-term healthy economic environment. Of course, that's hard to do. Investing is hard and it actually becomes harder when you have more money. It's comparatively easy to find an idea that will grow from $20,000 to $100,000 in a few years time compared to finding an idea that will grow from $50bn by 5-10% per year.
In many ways, I'm glad it isn't my job to figure that out and I do worry about what the government is going to get itself into, but I think we can all take solace that at least "big works" projects would see money spent in America. With the proposals sitting at about the cost of the War in Iraq, I think that we can safely say that we aren't looking at the scope of investment that Japan did and that it's an amount we have already absorbed as money down the drain.