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Demeter

(85,373 posts)
33. Europe’s Austerity Madness By PAUL KRUGMAN
Mon Oct 1, 2012, 07:53 AM
Oct 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/28/opinion/krugman-europes-austerity-madness.html?_r=2

So much for complacency. Just a few days ago, the conventional wisdom was that Europe finally had things under control. The European Central Bank, by promising to buy the bonds of troubled governments if necessary, had soothed markets. All that debtor nations had to do, the story went, was agree to more and deeper austerity — the condition for central bank loans — and all would be well. But the purveyors of conventional wisdom forgot that people were involved. Suddenly, Spain and Greece are being racked by strikes and huge demonstrations. The public in these countries is, in effect, saying that it has reached its limit: With unemployment at Great Depression levels and with erstwhile middle-class workers reduced to picking through garbage in search of food, austerity has already gone too far. And this means that there may not be a deal after all.

Much commentary suggests that the citizens of Spain and Greece are just delaying the inevitable, protesting against sacrifices that must, in fact, be made. But the truth is that the protesters are right. More austerity serves no useful purpose; the truly irrational players here are the allegedly serious politicians and officials demanding ever more pain. Consider Spain’s woes. What is the real economic problem? Basically, Spain is suffering the hangover from a huge housing bubble, which caused both an economic boom and a period of inflation that left Spanish industry uncompetitive with the rest of Europe. When the bubble burst, Spain was left with the difficult problem of regaining competitiveness, a painful process that will take years. Unless Spain leaves the euro — a step nobody wants to take — it is condemned to years of high unemployment. But this arguably inevitable suffering is being greatly magnified by harsh spending cuts; and these spending cuts are a case of inflicting pain for the sake of inflicting pain. First of all, Spain didn’t get into trouble because its government was profligate. On the contrary, on the eve of the crisis, Spain actually had a budget surplus and low debt. Large deficits emerged when the economy tanked, taking revenues with it, but, even so, Spain doesn’t appear to have all that high a debt burden.

It’s true that Spain is now having trouble borrowing to finance its deficits. That trouble is, however, mainly because of fears about the nation’s broader difficulties — not least the fear of political turmoil in the face of very high unemployment. And shaving a few points off the budget deficit won’t resolve those fears. In fact, research by the International Monetary Fund suggests that spending cuts in deeply depressed economies may actually reduce investor confidence because they accelerate the pace of economic decline. In other words, the straight economics of the situation suggests that Spain doesn’t need more austerity. It shouldn’t throw a party, and, in fact, it probably has no alternative (short of euro exit) to a protracted period of hard times. But savage cuts to essential public services, to aid to the needy, and so on actually hurt the country’s prospects for successful adjustment.

Why, then, are there demands for ever more pain?

Part of the explanation is that in Europe, as in America, far too many Very Serious People have been taken in by the cult of austerity, by the belief that budget deficits, not mass unemployment, are the clear and present danger, and that deficit reduction will somehow solve a problem brought on by private sector excess. Beyond that, a significant part of public opinion in Europe’s core — above all, in Germany — is deeply committed to a false view of the situation. Talk to German officials and they will portray the euro crisis as a morality play, a tale of countries that lived high and now face the inevitable reckoning. Never mind the fact that this isn’t at all what happened — and the equally inconvenient fact that German banks played a large role in inflating Spain’s housing bubble. Sin and its consequences is their story, and they’re sticking to it. Worse yet, this is also what many German voters believe, largely because it’s what politicians have told them. And fear of a backlash from voters who believe, wrongly, that they’re being put on the hook for the consequences of southern European irresponsibility leaves German politicians unwilling to approve essential emergency lending to Spain and other troubled nations unless the borrowers are punished first.... it’s long past time to put an end to this cruel nonsense. If Germany really wants to save the euro, it should let the European Central Bank do what’s necessary to rescue the debtor nations — and it should do so without demanding more pointless pain.

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And Now Comes A HUGE Week For The Economy And The Election Ghost Dog Sep 2012 #1
Got my popcorn! DemReadingDU Sep 2012 #2
Got my armor! Demeter Sep 2012 #3
Got my vodka! Fuddnik Sep 2012 #5
Touch of frost this morning Demeter Oct 2012 #39
We got down to about 76 last night. Fuddnik Oct 2012 #41
a link from Marc "Chicken Little" Faber? Please.... nt TeamPooka Sep 2012 #6
Who wood listen to someone that says shit like this? Po_d Mainiac Oct 2012 #7
followed by the words "buy gold". TeamPooka Oct 2012 #9
As opposed to "buy stocks" you mean? Ghost Dog Oct 2012 #11
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I assume u ain't referencing cramps? Po_d Mainiac Oct 2012 #57
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I survived Sunday! Demeter Sep 2012 #4
Whale Watching Po_d Mainiac Oct 2012 #8
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And a good morning to you! DemReadingDU Oct 2012 #27
. Ghost Dog Oct 2012 #28
Good morning! Demeter Oct 2012 #29
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a little al green to start your week off -- Im still in love with you xchrom Oct 2012 #30
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Europe’s Austerity Madness By PAUL KRUGMAN Demeter Oct 2012 #33
And to make the stupidity worse. Fuddnik Oct 2012 #40
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Let the stupidity begin! Fuddnik Oct 2012 #35
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Not Being Worse is Better, I Suppose Demeter Oct 2012 #45
... xchrom Oct 2012 #46
it is hard to vote for someone.... AnneD Oct 2012 #55
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I guess I have ... AnneD Oct 2012 #63
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Historian in the Marxist tradition with a global reach Ghost Dog Oct 2012 #56
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Riddle Me This: Who Has More Oil? Demeter Oct 2012 #47
Having crude is one thing. Being able to get it to markets is another. Po_d Mainiac Oct 2012 #58
Gotta go rustle up some calories Demeter Oct 2012 #48
see ya, miss demeter! xchrom Oct 2012 #49
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