Extremities of the US Economy

In the previous article regarding the failure of the Georgia-based bank, I mentioned that the real estate fiasco that is currently going on in the United States is a great illustration of how the US economy is different from every economy on Earth. In the interests of clarity, I’d like to expand on that idea a little more.
The US business world is based entirely on the idea of extremes. It is essentially the closest thing to a pure free market that exists, but at the same time it is also not exactly a free market in many different cases. The US economy however is not as regulated by the government as most of the other developed nations of the world and that means that the business extremes are more pronounced in the US than they would be anywhere else.
During the good times, this is a fantastic thing because it means that businesses boom in the US to levels that the rest of the world could not hope to match. It is also what allows the country to generate the massive amounts of wealth that it has. However, during the bad times, the businesses and the individuals suffer a lot more than they would in other countries and this is what we are witnessing now. Without casting aspersions or praise on this method of doing business, I will say that it is an interesting difference that the United States has.

