Yes, we are all very aware of your debate skills and tactics here TTH.
Originally Posted by Boltfan
TTH's debate "skills" regarding economic issues are pretty much limited to saying that he agrees with people like Paul Krugman, and his tactics often include childishly insulting anyone with whom he disagrees. I have yet to see him present a coherent, reasoned argument supporting his view.
Jesus, let's hope you don't teach economics anywhere.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Well, I guess that's an improvement. It seems to be a much milder insult than when you told me I was "mired in ignorance!"
And I suppose you'll be happy to find that, no, I do not teach economics anywhere. But I'd like for people to think just a little bit about the people who
are teaching economics at our major universities, and consider the great damage they've done for which our economy will suffer for many years. None of these people will ever admit that they've been wrong about almost everything for decades.
It would be fun to see a proponent of fiscal "stimulus packages" try to explain either of the below sequences of events in a coherent fashion.
(The following items are excerpts from a couple of my recent blog posts.)
Many academic economists take almost as gospel macro models first designed about 50 years ago that purport to demonstrate fiscal multipliers far greater than 1, and many cases greater than 1.5. As I mentioned earlier, recent robustness analysis suggests that multipliers for things such as social spending (claimed to be about 1.75 by Mark Zandi) tend to be around 0.5. The ECB commissioned some of these studies following questions by several European finance ministers concerning why some of their economies continue to stagnate in the presence of ever-increasing levels of government spending.
(Maybe we should begin considering it correct to refer to a Keynesian fiscal
divisor rather than a fiscal multiplier!)
An interesting case to examine is the one involving the domestic policy initiatives of Richard Nixon in the early 1970s. You might recall that Nixon had earlier declared himself a "Keynesian." (Almost everyone was a Keynesian in those days.)
Consider Nixon's 1971 State of the Union Address, where he called for a big boost in government spending to goose the economy. Here's an excerpt:
"The second great goal is to achieve what Americans have not enjoyed since 1957--full prosperity in peacetime.
The tide of inflation has turned. The rise in the cost of living, which had been gathering dangerous momentum in the late sixties, was reduced last year. Inflation will be further reduced this year.
But as we have moved from runaway inflation toward reasonable price stability and at the same time as we have been moving from a wartime economy to a peacetime economy, we have paid a price in increased unemployment.
We should take no comfort from the fact that the level of unemployment in this transition from a wartime to a peacetime economy is lower than in any peacetime year of the sixties.
This is not good enough for the man who is unemployed in the seventies. We must do better for workers in peacetime and we will do better.
To achieve this, I will submit an expansionary budget this year--one that will help stimulate the economy and thereby open up new job opportunities for millions of Americans.
It will be a full employment budget, a budget designed to be in balance if the economy were operating at its peak potential. By spending as if we were at full employment, we will help to bring about full employment."
(End of excerpt.)
Got that?
Nixon was calling for a fiscal stimulus package! And he got it, too, since congress was controlled by Democrats eager to increase social spending, which first surpassed defense spending in 1975.
How did that work out? Well , case you don't remember, it didn't prevent the 1973-75 recession from being the worst (up until that time) since the Great Depression.
Now, by contrast...
Think for just a minute about the deep recession of 1920-21. Most people don't realize that the first year of that downturn was actually worse than the first year of the Great Depression 10 years later. Year-over-year deflation was in the 15% range, the stock markets dropped almost 50%, and industrial production fell off a cliff. If Paul Krugman had been around then, he would undoubtedly have called for massive government stimulus. But Warren Harding did the opposite -- he called for, and got, big cuts in both taxes and spending. Instead of stagnating, the economy took off like a rocket -- and for the rest of the 1920s, we had growth rates higher than at any other time in the last century. People later referred to that decade as the "Roaring Twenties."
Throughout our history, we've had recessions, depressions, speculative booms & busts, inflation, deflation, and asset bubbles. We always recovered from their consequences, usually very quickly. Only in the 1930s did we begin to get the idea that it's necessary for government to intervene massively in order to attempt to mitigate the severity of downturns in the business cycle. How has that worked out? I think you can see for yourself.
You're no more likely to see fiscal multipliers graeater than 1 working in the real world than you are to see a Tasmanian Tiger.
Why do people still hang on to such obviously discredited economic doctrine? Well, I think the answer is pretty obvious. It offers the "intellectual framework" undergirding arguments made by big spending politicians whose primary goal is to buy votes with other people's money.
Regarding liquidity traps, the Paul Krugman prescription is to throw an almost unlimited amount of new deficit spending at the problem. But that's exactly what Japan's been doing for almost 20 years! With one big spending package after another, they tripled their debt/GDP ratio to a level of about 2.2. And for what? The Japanese economy is still mired in stagnation. If we followed Krugman's recommendations, we'd have an even bigger looming fiscal crisis as well as a stagnating economy. Again on this issue, history is quite clear.
Someone started a thread in the "Diamonds and Tuxedos" forum last year addressed directy at me and my concerns about deficit spending and the phony "stimulus package" of 2009. In several posts, I covered a few of these issues more fully, even including money supply issues as they relate to the economy and our fiscal predicament. I also predicted a downturn in 2011.
Here's the thread:
http://www.eccie.net/showthread.php?t=78038
Whether you agree or disagree, posts by several participants offer interesting food for thought.
And if you're simply
not interested in the topic, you might read the thread on your iPad late at night anyway.
It might be an excellent sleep aid!