“In the absence of pro-growth policies on the fiscal side, the sole support in the developed world has been monetary policy. There’s been a more or less universally practiced set of monetary policies consisting of zero and now negative interest rates and so-called quantitative easing — various forms of asset buying. It started out as all bond buying, but now it’s leaked into equities. The result of all that — I call it monetary extremism — is that the economies have held up and had some growth, but that growth has been tepid, with the biggest gains going to those who own financial assets while wage growth has been stagnant.
The cure for the crisis — for the debt crisis, the financial crisis — has been deemed by the developed world governments to be more debt. There has not been a deleveraging .. I think it’s a very dangerous time in the financial markets.”
– Paul Singer