Despite a chorus of voices claiming otherwise, we aren’t Greece. We are, however, looking more and more like Japan. For the past few months, much commentary on the economy – some of it posing as reporting – has had one central theme: policy makers are doing too much. Governments need to stop spending, we’re told. Greece is held up as a cautionary tale, and every uptick in the interest rate on U.S. government bonds is treated as an indication that markets are turning on America over its deficits. Meanwhile, there are continual warnings that inflation is just around the corner, and that the Fed needs to pull back from its efforts to support the economy and get started on its ‘exit strategy, tightening credit by selling off assets and raising interest rates. And what about near-record unemployment, with long-term unemployment worse than at any time since the 1930s? What about the fact that the employment gains of the past few months, although welcome, have, so far, brought back fewer than 500,000 of the more than 8 million jobs lost in the wake of the financial crisis? Hey, worrying about the unemployed is just so 2009. But the […]
Saturday, May 22nd, 2010
Lost Decade Looming?
Author: PAUL KRUGMAN
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 20-May-10
Link: Lost Decade Looming?
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 20-May-10
Link: Lost Decade Looming?
Stephan: Spend a few moments Googling 'Lost Decade Japan'. It will give you a sense of what this was like for the Japanese, and how they felt about the experience. After you have read some of what you find, ask yourself would I enjoy this? Then demand that we stop spending hundreds of billions of dollars on two wars and get serious about getting our own society on track. Make the wars part of the the coming election cycle.