[image: The New York Times] <http://www.nytimes.com/>

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New York TIMES / April 25, 2013
The 1 Percent’s Solution By PAUL
KRUGMAN<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/paulkrugman/index.html>

Economic debates rarely end with a T.K.O. But the great policy debate of
recent years between Keynesians, who advocate sustaining and, indeed,
increasing government spending in a depression, and austerians, who demand
immediate spending cuts, comes close — at least in the world of ideas. At
this point, the austerian position has imploded; not only have its
predictions about the real world failed completely, but the academic
research invoked to support that position has turned out to be riddled with
errors, omissions and dubious statistics.

Yet two big questions remain. First, how did austerity doctrine become so
influential in the first place? Second, will policy change at all now that
crucial austerian claims have become fodder for late-night comics?

On the first question: the dominance of austerians in influential circles
should disturb anyone who likes to believe that policy is based on, or even
strongly influenced by, actual evidence. After all, the two main studies
providing the alleged intellectual justification for austerity — Alberto
Alesina and Silvia Ardagna on “expansionary austerity” and Carmen Reinhart
and Kenneth Rogoff on the dangerous debt “threshold” at 90 percent of
G.D.P. — faced withering
criticism<http://www.rooseveltinstitute.org/sites/all/files/not_the_time_for_austerity.pdf>almost
as soon as they came out.

And the studies did not hold up under scrutiny. By late 2010, the
International Monetary Fund had reworked
Alesina-Ardagna<http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/05/the-imf-on-fiscal-austerity/>with
better data and reversed their findings, while many
economists raised fundamental questions about
Reinhart-Rogoff<http://www.epi.org/publication/bp271/>long before we
knew about the
famous Excel 
error<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/19/opinion/krugman-the-excel-depression.html>.
Meanwhile, real-world events — stagnation in Ireland, the original poster
child for austerity, falling interest rates in the United States, which was
supposed to be facing an imminent fiscal crisis — quickly made nonsense of
austerian predictions.

Yet austerity maintained and even strengthened its grip on elite opinion.
Why?

Part of the answer surely lies in the widespread desire to see economics as
a morality play, to make it a tale of excess and its consequences. We lived
beyond our means, the story goes, and now we’re paying the inevitable
price. Economists can explain ad nauseam that this is wrong, that the
reason we have mass unemployment isn’t that we spent too much in the past
but that we’re spending too little now, and that this problem can and
should be solved. No matter; many people have a visceral sense that we
sinned and must seek redemption through suffering — and neither economic
argument nor the observation that the people now suffering aren’t at all
the same people who sinned during the bubble years makes much of a dent.

But it’s not just a matter of emotion versus logic. You can’t understand
the influence of austerity doctrine without talking about class and
inequality.

What, after all, do people want from economic policy? The answer, it turns
out, is that it depends on which people you ask — a point documented in a
recent research
paper<http://faculty.wcas.northwestern.edu/%7Ejnd260/cab/CAB2012%20-%20Page1.pdf>by
the political scientists Benjamin Page, Larry Bartels and Jason
Seawright. The paper compares the policy preferences of ordinary Americans
with those of the very wealthy, and the results are eye-opening.

Thus, the average American is somewhat worried about budget deficits, which
is no surprise given the constant barrage of deficit scare stories in the
news media, but the wealthy, by a large majority, regard deficits as the
most important problem we face. And how should the budget deficit be
brought down? The wealthy favor cutting federal spending on health care and
Social Security — that is, “entitlements” — while the public at large
actually wants to see spending on those programs rise.

You get the idea: The austerity agenda looks a lot like a simple expression
of upper-class preferences, wrapped in a facade of academic rigor. What the
top 1 percent wants becomes what economic science says we must do.

Does a continuing depression actually serve the interests of the wealthy?
That’s doubtful, since a booming economy is generally good for almost
everyone. What is true, however, is that the years since we turned to
austerity have been dismal for workers but not at all bad for the wealthy,
who have benefited from surging profits and stock prices even as long-term
unemployment festers. The 1 percent may not actually want a weak economy,
but they’re doing well enough to indulge their prejudices.

And this makes one wonder how much difference the intellectual collapse of
the austerian position will actually make. To the extent that we have
policy of the 1 percent, by the 1 percent, for the 1 percent, won’t we just
see new justifications for the same old policies?

I hope not; I’d like to believe that ideas and evidence matter, at least a
bit. Otherwise, what am I doing with my life? But I guess we’ll see just
how much cynicism is justified.

[one reason why the austerian perspective is so popular is a popular
confusion between individual household or corporate debts, which indeed can
be deadly, and the debt borne by a sovereign government that's stated in
its own currency and mostly owed to its own constituents, so that the
latter see it as an asset. Even the U.S. government's external debt is to
countries that benefit from its success.]

--

Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own way
and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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