If you are interested in why the US Economy has failed after nearly 60 years of unprecedented success this article will help you comprehend the subject. It's very objective and indisputably factual. Take the time to familiarize yourself with this matter as it can help protect you in the aftermath of the collapse.
8/23/2011 9:56:11 PM
8/23/2011 9:56:59 PM
8/23/2011 9:57:46 PM
No one on earth would be willing to read that wall of text, lock.[Edited on August 23, 2011 at 10:16 PM. Reason : ]
8/23/2011 10:15:47 PM
I'm with face on this one.
8/23/2011 11:00:14 PM
Since you're going to get someone claiming that you've taken a Krugman statement out of context, I'll go ahead and get this out there (posted by a user on Reddit):
8/23/2011 11:14:52 PM
Larry Summers, I almost forgot about that asshat. ^ the Krugman quotes are too good. Racking your brain looking for the next bubble, just to keep this artificial debt fueled economy going is no way to go through life son.
8/23/2011 11:24:23 PM
^^^^^ I read about 4 lines of that so far, and I will read the whole thing later. I am guessing that I will be more or less like-minded with the author....but I'm pretty sure it's not going to be "very objective" like you claimed.[Edited on August 23, 2011 at 11:26 PM. Reason : ^^^^^]
8/23/2011 11:25:56 PM
So many words to express so little substance. 3 quick points then I wont bother typing any more. #1. The basic argument is: "We spent all this money and we still have high unemployment!!! Therefore, all Keynesian theory must be invalid!!!" Clearly, the author has never heard that what actually matters is NET fiscal stimulus. While the federal government was expanding its spending, state governments were constricting theirs. As a result, net fiscal stimulus was not much and no Keynesian would be suprised by the fact economic performance has been so weak (and economists like Krugman weren't). There are no contradictions here. #2. In describing the failure of government policy before/after the Great Depression, the author cites Murray Rothbard and his book America's Great Depression. Honestly, if you want to hitch your wagon to Austrian theories, this isnt how to do it. Rothbard's account of how "artifical meddling in the economy was a disaster prior to the Great Depression" is theoretically flawed (for essentially the same reasons Krugman lays out here: http://www.slate.com/id/9593/). This is why Modern Austrians have moved on to Roger Garrison's reinturpretation of the Austrian Business Cycle Theory. http://www.auburn.edu/~garriro/tam.htm#3. I can see why face decided to paste a wall of text instead of just a link to the original blog post. The author looks like a real nutter. Here is the original post:http://www.theburningplatform.com/?p=20378And here is a recent post on illuminati conspiraces. http://www.theburningplatform.com/?p=20510 If you have not read this piece, don't waste your time.[Edited on August 24, 2011 at 1:45 AM. Reason : ``]
8/24/2011 1:31:51 AM
8/24/2011 6:55:09 AM
I'm not going to read all of that on my phone, but...If you think the economy has failed, I would say the economy hasn't really been successful over the past 60 years.
8/24/2011 7:18:49 AM
Kris, I didn't expect people who already know everything to read it. This summary is for the people who haven't closed their mind because they worship communist statues.
8/24/2011 8:34:53 AM
alternate explanations that have been making the rounds
8/24/2011 8:53:25 AM
^ #3. Interesting way to spin that. It's not an investment drought -- it's the fact that financial assets ARE much easier to invest in and promise more rewards than finding businesses, evaluating their business plans, and waiting more than a quarter for them to pay a return. Now, after all that deregulation, local banks take deposits and put them in hedge funds instead of making business loans. Why put money into the real economy when the financial economy is so much easier?That's not a sign of lack of investments. That's the sign of an out-of-control, dysfunctional financial market.
8/24/2011 9:13:11 AM
Yeah I think I agree with you on that onelike the author I think 1, 4, 5, and 6 are the most valid. And personally 1 and 4 are the most important of those
8/24/2011 9:27:00 AM
8/24/2011 11:49:28 AM
I read the entire thing while in an alcohol induced haze last night. My main take away was that an "unbiased" article that is supposed to explain how 60 years of unprecedented success went down the tube in 3 mentioned Obama 22 times. I really really really wish he, or any president, had that kind of power but they just don't.
8/24/2011 11:54:46 AM
The President has limited power, but they also have a lot of sway. A President that was serious about austerity could make it happen. Obama is thoroughly Keynesian. He thinks that economic growth comes from the federal government. In reality, the federal government needs to get out of the way and allow the United States to become a competitive place to run a business again.The federal government is not capable of efficiently creating jobs. They would need to create millions of jobs over the next few years, but all of those jobs come at a cost. We need a ground up recovery, not stimulus injected by the government.
8/24/2011 11:59:28 AM
Yeah bro, fine, Obama is stifling the recovery. I may not agree, but for the sake of argument, I'll concede that a logical case could be made supporting that conclusion. That's not what the article is saying though. It's literally pinning the entire blame for the economic crisis on him. That totally kills the credibility of the article and it's writer for me.
8/24/2011 12:10:16 PM
I think anyone here would admit that George W. Bush was a Keynesian, and the case could be made that Reagan was as well. Bush was completely supportive of what Greenspan did. The problem is that Obama is President right now, and he subscribes to a failed ideology. Stimulus is killing us.The thing is, I see Facebook status updates all the time from people that think Krugman is a genius and that anyone who disagrees with him is foolish. Trying to convince these people otherwise is like telling a Christian that the bible was written by men.This isn't a Republican versus Democrat thing. Both parties have been looting the coffers behind the scenes. That's why you've got folks like Alan Grayson and Dylan Ratigan who are, traditionally, very anti-Republican, but they can still see what's going on here.[Edited on August 24, 2011 at 12:40 PM. Reason : ]
8/24/2011 12:30:13 PM
8/24/2011 1:53:33 PM
If Obama is stifling a recovery, so did GWB. GWB got to implement a large percentage of the policies republicans had been having wet dreams about for years. So far, most of what Obama has done is to continue those policies.Other than the healthcare plan that won't even be in effect for several years, the policies are the same if not more Republican than GWB.What exactly do people want? Hell, should we even believe that people know what they want?
8/25/2011 12:33:00 AM
I find it funny that the OP thinks this article "explains" anything. What sort of "explanation" is contained in this article, other than extremely coarse, unconvincing correlational arguments? I consider an explanation to actually reduce things to first principles, attempt to, or at least propose a mechanism. All I see are "hurf -- I'ma call this thang that thang and then show that these two things go together". I'm sorry if pointing to a simple-minded correlation that barely fits the definition assigned to it fails to convince me.Destroyer: you have no clue what "being a Keynesian" means. In fact you don't care to know, I take it, as you aren't about to read Keynes any time soon or even spend the time figuring out what actual, self-labeled Keynesians (who know the theory) think. It's not like there isn't an Internet full of people laying out the arguments clearly to you.Three's nothing "Keynesian" about doubling the national debt paying for peacetime military research/investment, and then continuing such reckless (and useless) investment for a few decades, neglecting investments that give a damn. Has anybody forgotten our crumbling bridges, levees, and increasingly stupid swarms of children who are less and less capable, qualified, educated?[Edited on August 25, 2011 at 3:33 AM. Reason : .]
8/25/2011 3:31:53 AM
8/25/2011 6:56:57 AM
About as much as military spending, to be specific. I'm simply pointing out a major source of the problems we're having today, which will no likely be blamed on "Keynesian" economics, would be solved by what one might consider sensible policy based on extensions of Keynes' work[Edited on August 25, 2011 at 7:03 AM. Reason : .]
8/25/2011 7:03:24 AM
Let me step back a second, you threw up this strawman
8/25/2011 7:19:22 AM
8/25/2011 7:33:04 AM
What I wrote needs to be clarified a bit. Military spending can certainly be interpreted as Keynesian, but there's no reason to believe there's some necessary link there because there isn't. People could be hired to do useful things, after all. Hell, things useful to the private sector.
8/25/2011 7:52:04 AM
If the spending can be justified because it is "useful" and therefore worth the money/debt then it is not keynesian spending.
8/25/2011 8:46:23 AM
8/25/2011 9:31:20 AM
8/25/2011 10:05:26 AM
8/25/2011 11:38:32 AM
8/25/2011 11:42:01 AM
8/25/2011 11:53:26 AM
8/25/2011 11:57:49 AM
8/25/2011 12:06:13 PM
That's completely wrong. He very clearly states that Greenspan was not slashing rates (read: blowing up bubbles) aggressively enough.This is the thing that bugs me about Krugman supporters. No matter what Krugman says, how clear it is, or how much context is provided, somehow, he's not advocating the policies that he is plainly advocating.
8/25/2011 12:10:36 PM
I suppose you think Krugman also wants more Earthquakes and an Alien Invasion too?Seriously, just answer, I'm trying to find out if you have any kind of nuance detection abilities at all.[Edited on August 25, 2011 at 12:40 PM. Reason : .]
8/25/2011 12:40:31 PM
8/25/2011 12:44:29 PM
Blaming the Fed's creation of a housing bubble for the economic crisis is like blaming Subaru's creation of the WRX for a bunch of teenage drivers wrapping them around trees (i was one of those stupid teenage drivers who wrapped one around a tree ).[Edited on August 25, 2011 at 1:06 PM. Reason : waaay too much coffee this morning]
8/25/2011 12:50:12 PM
8/25/2011 2:37:37 PM
Everything to the right of "free market currency" is Krugmanesque.Being a democrat or a democratic socialist or a social democrat or a liberal or a neoconservative or a syndicalist or an integralist or a bokonist or a eurocommunist or a follower of Juche Thought is also Krugmanesque according to the far right.[Edited on August 25, 2011 at 3:19 PM. Reason : x]
8/25/2011 3:16:45 PM
Getting desperate, eh?
8/25/2011 3:17:42 PM
There's literally nothing new under the sun to say to someone who can't be convinced that their extremism is inerrant.
8/25/2011 3:20:02 PM
Agreed.
8/25/2011 3:28:32 PM
8/25/2011 3:29:28 PM
Not lax lending standards, destroyer, lax regulations on the bundling and trading of mortgage securities and other financial instruments like credit default swaps.
8/25/2011 3:30:33 PM
^^^So what, to you, is a "moderate" ideology?[Edited on August 25, 2011 at 3:31 PM. Reason : x]
8/25/2011 3:31:35 PM
8/25/2011 3:37:19 PM
So, to go along with my analogy, that's like throwing a party, people getting way too drunk, keeping the alcohol flowing, and when the house is completely trashed in the morning, blaming the mess on lack of rules prohibiting vomiting on the floor and drawing sharpie penises on people. Those events never could have taken place if the person throwing the party had been responsible, rather than fueling the problem.MBSs were just a way for banks to package in the good with the bad. It was a chain reaction. The banks didn't care who they were loaning to, because they knew they'd just be selling MBS on a secondary market as soon as the loan was approved. It's not coincidence that the derivatives market exploded in the years following absurdly loose monetary policy.
8/25/2011 3:38:19 PM