Nobel Prize-winning Economist Paul Krugman, professor of
international trade and economics at Princeton University, pauses during
a Bloomberg Television interview in New York, U.S., on Monday, Jan. 28,
2013. Krugman discussed the performance of bonds, Fed monetary policy,
and the U.S. economy compared with that of Japan. Photographer: Scott
Eells/Bloomberg via Getty Images
They say hindsight is 20/20, but according to Paul Krugman it may
actually be much worse than that when it comes to economic
policy-making.
The Nobel-Prize winning economist and New York Times columnist
wrote in a blog post Sunday
that current policymakers are basing their decisions to cut spending,
leading in many cases to high unemployment, on the false notion that the
recession of the late 1970s and early 1980s was caused by too much
government debt and too many government handouts.
During the period leading up to that recession government debt was
low and stable or falling as a share of the economy. What actually
caused the recession of the late 1970s,
Krugman writes,
was an unfortunate vicious cycle of workers demanding more money
because they expected prices to rise, companies raising prices to pay
for their increased costs as well as big oil price shocks.
“It would be bad enough if we were basing policy today on lessons from the 70s,”
Krugman wrote in the blog post Sunday. “It’s even worse that we’re basing policy today on a mythical 70s that never was.”
Though Krugman has been criticizing some policymakers’ obsession with
austerity for years, the strategy has recently come under fire after a
widely-cited paper by Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Ken Rogoff
thought to prove that high levels of government debt correlated with
economic downturns,
turned out to be riddled with errors. For their part, Reinhart and Rogoff have
tried to disown the austerity movement
-- which included Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), the U.K.’s George Osborne
and other prominent politicians -- which cited their research as a way
to justify their policies.
Earlier this month former President
Bill Clinton backed Krugman’s argument
that a laser-sharp focus on cutting the deficit can lead to high
unemployment and other economic problems, saying “It's obvious that if
you overdo austerity, you get Europe.”
The average
unemployment rate in the Eurozone is at a record 12.1 percent
and the region is currently mired in the longest recession in its
history. Some experts blame the region’s policymakers’ obsessive focus
on slashing government debt for the eurozone’s economic woes.
At
least in the U.S., it turns out runaway debt may not be as much of a
concern as originally thought, despite politicians’ panic. The
nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office found earlier this month that the deficit is likely to shrink rapidly through 2015.
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