Krugman making sense again

This seems to be inversely proportional to the number of bitchy Bernie comments he makes. Since he made none for once, the column may be worth another Nobel (!)

This morning's column was about a new macroeconomic argument in favor of deficits. The idea is that government debt provides a kind of medium of exchange or "currency" in the asset economy because it is so safe. The implication is that because we don't have enough debt to go around, playas get into bidding wars over currency. It's like you can't find enough cash to go shopping so you start fighting with your neighbors over who gets to use the quarters. The result is deflation and economic stagnation.

The obvious solution here is to create more government debt. I assume that most of us here can think of ways to create this debt to buy useful things. Maybe one day Krugman will realize that Bernie's programs for the 99% will create more - and safer - debt than Hillary's looting of the treasury for her friends.

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lunachickie's picture

Econ101 by a guy who desperately needs to get some of his cred back.

Imagine what his hate mail has been looking like for the last couple months...

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progdog's picture

I thought Krugman was supposed to provide insight, not facile pontificating.

I doubt anyone on the left would object to the government taking on the states' debt - that dog won't hunt.

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prog - weirdo | dog - woof

has gone from $1Trillion to over $50Trillion. Loans cost very little for the well connected; what is lacking are suitable investment opportunities. A symptom of the lack of what the capitalists want for return on investment is the proliferation of financial instruments which are poorly understood, easily manipulated, and parasitical to the society at large.

Krugman's neoclassical economic background leaves him unable to explain the persistent economic stagnation the developed world faces. Remember, Krugman's model calls for lightly regulated capitalism to have a steady-state of growth, rising wages and falling unemployment. Wrong, Wrong, and Wrong.

In Germany, there are negative interest rates - you pay to park your money in a bank and on the other hand, loans are essentially free. The same goes for Japan. In Denmark, it made the news when people with new mortgages get a monthly check instead of having to pay.

In my opinion, it's as if he's run out of straws at which to grasp so he repeats himself. His economic background does not prepare him to deal with either persistent stagnation(very low growth) or capitalist induced ecocide.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

But it would be better for almost everyone, the story goes, if governments were to issue more debt, investing the proceeds in much-needed infrastructure even while providing the private sector with the collateral it needs to function.

There's the rub. Banks will not lend to small businesses, I know this first hand. "We are not in that business." They loan money (which thy admit is from the Fed) to mortgages, cars, student debt and credit cards and any Ponzi scheme that they can find. In essence government debt is converted to our debt and it lowers our standard of living.

The basic flaw in Krugman's philosophy is that unconstrained Capitalism doesn't work. If your goal is to create small businesses and educate your people, well, put your money there directly. The banks have been told to invest some of their Fed money into business, but they just can't bring themselves to do it. On top of this venture capitalists are not venture anymore. They want to invest, or buy established companies of a minimum of $10M revenue, with the goal of complete control. The net result is that the middle class is hogtied as consumers and the cost of business in the US is exorbitant. These are serious structural defects, which Krugman outright denies. His formula, increased debt without limit, will eventually put the government in the position of not having the resources to address critical problems. If the US were rated fairly as other countries are, we would have a very poor rating and no one would want our bonds. Here's to being the biggest player on the block ... for a few more years.

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Capitalism has always been the rule of the people by the oligarchs. You only have two choices, eliminate them or restrict their power.

martianexpatriate's picture

I don't think most people understand that America became a superpower almost by accident. What Franklin Delano Roosevelt took a great deal of foresight on his part.

In many ways, the hardest part was where he got on the radio night after night and told the nation about the Great Deal. First he sold it, then later on he passed laws.

At the same time that income of the common man rose and the nation began to recover, they rebuilt the country after the great war, using all that industry they had built for war machines and converting it to other things. From that the middle class grew.

Our economy is stagnating specifically because the middle class is dying. Only the resurgence of the middle class can bring it back.

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lunachickie's picture

away from this:

using all that industry they had built for war machines and converting it to other things.

Someone mentioned a coup the other day somewhere around here. I have often thought we've been "silent couped" and that happened on 9/11, when the nation went back on permanent "war" footing. Except this time, a lot of the "enemy" we were fighting was either self-imposed, or invented, all to bring that munitions industry back to the fore.

Fucking monsters. They've taken over everything.

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The 2nd bombing of the WTC should have been handled as a police matter as the first one was successfully handled. There was no attack by another country; but, rather, it was closer to a mafia-type operation than a blitz from another country.

Bush/Cheney saw it as a chance to impose a dictatorship and took it. The citizens have been kept in a state of fear since the Cold War was initiated and were susceptible to allowing the federal government do anything in the name of "security." Obama has been more than willing to follow in the footsteps of Bush/Cheney with his extrajudicial murders of Americans and his drone strikes and his war of whistleblowers and his protections for offshore tax avoidance schemes.

So, I agree with your post: Both parties welcomed the opportunity to go back on a war footing and the great majority of Americans are the big losers. Want to continue to be a loser? Vote Clinton.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

PastorAgnostic's picture

When you give effective legislative veto power to a bunch of mental midgets who think Ayn Rand was brilliant, instead of more accurately considering her to be raving loon with ideas that could only excite a pimply faced, functionally illiterate, teen boy with a serious personality disorder who lacks all social graces, you end up with today's congress. Dysfunctional, inept, corrupt, and led by a man whose economic ideas would destroy the world economy.

Debt is good. Debt builds things.

Here is an example.

Take a medium sized town on one side of a large river. A hospital exists on the other side, and a company is building a new plant that could provide hundreds of good paying jobs. The nearest bridge is 1 hour way.

The town elders have two choices:

A. Save up money in a rainy bridge fund, and when you collected enough, build the bridge.

B. Issue debt in the form of bonds, build the bridge now, get shorter, safer commutes to the hospital, open up the new jobs to the town's people. Charge a toll to pay the bonds.

The increase in productivity (2 hours less commuting time) would more than offset the increased debt.

And with teabuggerers in office, how long do you think some rainy day bridge fund would last? They'd just cut taxes for the rich and raid the fund.

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Olivia LaRosa's picture

The only kind of debt instrument I would buy would be sovereign debt. Preferably US or German sovereign debt. I would not be adverse to other countries' debt depending on their bond ratings. Even if I had to pay to hold it, which is happening right now. We have negative interest sovereign debt in many European countries. This is new economic territory and it frightens me.

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BERNIE SANDERS - NOT FOR SALE
I have been waiting for this election my whole life, it turns out!

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DKOS ID debocracy aka OliviaLaRosa