I'm sure we will see more comparisons to Japan like this one (ht jb).



From Matt Phillips and Justin Lahart at the WSJ: This Time, Maybe the U.S. Is Japan



Since Standard & Poor's stripped the U.S. of its triple-A credit rating on Aug. 5 and the Federal Reserve followed on Tuesday with a statement that interest rates will be at near-zero until at least mid-2013, bond traders have been recasting their models. Many have been using the experience of Japan, which was first downgraded from triple-A in 1998 and has had near-zero rates for the better part of a decade.

...

As an economist at the New York Federal Reserve, Kenneth Kuttner wrote a paper explaining why, in the aftermath of the dot-com bust, the U.S. was decidedly not like Japan. The stock market decline paled in comparison to the bursting of Japan's real estate bubble, the financial system was strong and the U.S. government had the fiscal leeway to boost spending if the economy weakened. "It was very easy to be smug at that point," says Mr. Kuttner, now a professor at Williams College. "Now, I'm running out of reasons to say the U.S. is all that different."

There are differences - like a growing population, but it does look more and more like ... Bernanke-san Earlier: