Friday, June 11, 2010

Dean Baker on David Brooks's magical thinking.

In his worst column so far this year, Brooks writes:
Some theorists will tell you that if governments shift their emphasis to deficit cutting, they risk sending the world back into recession. There are some reasons to think this is so, but events tell a more complicated story. 
A theorist named Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank who was appointed by Bush and kept on by Obama, i.e. the most powerful man in the federal government, said yesterday that "This very moment is not the time to radically reduce our spending or raise our taxes, because the economy is still in a recovery mode and needs that support."

For example, retail sales declined in May. This is just one month, but it's a weak report.
Brooks:
Alberto Alesina of Harvard has surveyed the history of debt reduction. He’s found that, in many cases, large and decisive deficit reduction policies were followed by increases in growth, not recessions. Countries that reduced debt viewed the future with more confidence. The political leaders who ordered the painful cuts were often returned to office. As Alesina put it in a recent paper, "in several episodes, spending cuts adopted to reduce deficits have been associated with economic expansions rather than recessions."
Someone should Fisk that paper. At the very beginning of his column Brooks writes "Sixteen months ago, Congress passed a stimulus package that will end up costing each average taxpayer $7,798. Economists were divided then about whether this spending was worth it, and they are just as divided now."

And then a couple of paragraphs later "Over all, most economists seem to think the stimulus was a good idea..." Were economists divided into two camps where most thought the stimulus was a good idea and a minority of ambitious, know-nothing suck-ups didn't?

Paul Krugman on Chermany.
You know the answer, don’t you? Yep: everyone is counting on the US to become the consumer of last resort, sucking in imports thanks to a weak euro and a manipulated renminbi. Oh, and while they rely on US demand to make up for their own contractionary policies, they’ll lecture us on how irresponsible we’re being, running those budget and current account deficits.

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