Extending unemployment benefits seems to be a no-brainer at the moment...
Originally Posted by discreetgent
Given the extraordinarily high unemployment rate, I agree -- it's just that I believe we should pay for it by cutting wasteful spending in other areas. For example, by cancelling the remainder of the "stimulus" package, which is comprised mostly of politically motivated patronage spending and bailouts for public employee unions. Of course, congressional porkmeisters will have none of that!
Krugman and I are still right on the stimulus...
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Really?
If you seriously believe that, can you point to an instance where adding massive new spending to an economy that already has large structural deficits has ever increased a nation's prosperity?
Of course not. One doesn't exist, even though it's been tried many times.
Krugman has argued that it would actually be acceptable to run our federal debt (held by the public, not "gross debt") all the way up to about 110%, since we did that in order to finance World War II, and we ended up handling it OK. But that would be flirting with disaster for a couple of reasons:
Despite the Great Depression of the 1930s, we were still a very wealthy country in 1941 with a deep pool of savings. We were also the world's largest creditor nation. Now the reverse is the case; we're the biggest debtor nation in history.
We utilized that deep pool of savings to fight WWII, which cost about $3.5 trillion in terms of 2010 dollars. Patriotic Americans bought vast quantities of war savings bonds. Therefore we owed the debt "to ourselves."
Since that was the case, we were also able to inflate away much of the debt over the next decade or two. I doubt that would go over very well with PBOC officials and other foreign debtholders.
But the biggest reason we were able to deal with all that debt was that most of the industrial capacity of what would otherwise have been our global competitors had been blown away! We represented about half the world's GDP and we were a manufacturing and exporting colossus.
By contrast, just look at us today, after years of deficit spending and de-industrialization. Pretty pathetic sight, isn't it?
I believe the main reason the large increase in government spending will act as an economic
retardant, not a stimulant, is that it creates an uncertainty overhang that gives managers and entrepreneurs real angst. Everyone knows that policymakers will soon be forced to confront what more and more people feel is a looming fiscal crisis. Tinkering around the edges won't be good enough; whatever "solutions" emerge will have to be very big -- and they'll clearly create headwinds for the economy.
No one should be surprised if the unemployment rate remains very high for an extended period of time in the face of this anti-growth policy agenda.
Want a
real stimulus package? Here's a better plan:
http://money.cnn.com/2010/06/24/news...tune/index.htm
Of course there's not the slighest chance this will happen, so I think we're at risk of suffering a Japanese-style "lost decade."