http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/29/opinion/krugman-the-story-of-our-time.html?smid=fb-share&_r=0

P-ED COLUMNIST
The Story of Our Time
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: April 28, 2013 804 Comments


Those of us who have spent years arguing against premature fiscal
austerity have just had a good two weeks. Academic studies that
supposedly justified austerity have lost credibility; hard-liners in
the European Commission and elsewhere have softened their rhetoric.
The tone of the conversation has definitely changed.
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My sense, however, is that many people still don’t understand what
this is all about. So this seems like a good time to offer a sort of
refresher on the nature of our economic woes, and why this remains a
very bad time for spending cuts.

Let’s start with what may be the most crucial thing to understand: the
economy is not like an individual family.

Families earn what they can, and spend as much as they think prudent;
spending and earning opportunities are two different things. In the
economy as a whole, however, income and spending are interdependent:
my spending is your income, and your spending is my income. If both of
us slash spending at the same time, both of our incomes will fall too.

And that’s what happened after the financial crisis of 2008. Many
people suddenly cut spending, either because they chose to or because
their creditors forced them to; meanwhile, not many people were able
or willing to spend more. The result was a plunge in incomes that also
caused a plunge in employment, creating the depression that persists
to this day.

Why did spending plunge? Mainly because of a burst housing bubble and
an overhang of private-sector debt — but if you ask me, people talk
too much about what went wrong during the boom years and not enough
about what we should be doing now. For no matter how lurid the
excesses of the past, there’s no good reason that we should pay for
them with year after year of mass unemployment.

So what could we do to reduce unemployment? The answer is, this is a
time for above-normal government spending, to sustain the economy
until the private sector is willing to spend again. The crucial point
is that under current conditions, the government is not, repeat not,
in competition with the private sector. Government spending doesn’t
divert resources away from private uses; it puts unemployed resources
to work. Government borrowing doesn’t crowd out private investment; it
mobilizes funds that would otherwise go unused.

Now, just to be clear, this is not a case for more government spending
and larger budget deficits under all circumstances — and the claim
that people like me always want bigger deficits is just false. For the
economy isn’t always like this — in fact, situations like the one
we’re in are fairly rare. By all means let’s try to reduce deficits
and bring down government indebtedness once normal conditions return
and the economy is no longer depressed. But right now we’re still
dealing with the aftermath of a once-in-three-generations financial
crisis. This is no time for austerity.

O.K., I’ve just given you a story, but why should you believe it?
There are, after all, people who insist that the real problem is on
the economy’s supply side: that workers lack the skills they need, or
that unemployment insurance has destroyed the incentive to work, or
that the looming menace of universal health care is preventing hiring,
or whatever. How do we know that they’re wrong?

Well, I could go on at length on this topic, but just look at the
predictions the two sides in this debate have made. People like me
predicted right from the start that large budget deficits would have
little effect on interest rates, that large-scale “money printing” by
the Fed (not a good description of actual Fed policy, but never mind)
wouldn’t be inflationary, that austerity policies would lead to
terrible economic downturns. The other side jeered, insisting that
interest rates would skyrocket and that austerity would actually lead
to economic expansion. Ask bond traders, or the suffering populations
of Spain, Portugal and so on, how it actually turned out.

Is the story really that simple, and would it really be that easy to
end the scourge of unemployment? Yes — but powerful people don’t want
to believe it. Some of them have a visceral sense that suffering is
good, that we must pay a price for past sins (even if the sinners then
and the sufferers now are very different groups of people). Some of
them see the crisis as an opportunity to dismantle the social safety
net. And just about everyone in the policy elite takes cues from a
wealthy minority that isn’t actually feeling much pain.

What has happened now, however, is that the drive for austerity has
lost its intellectual fig leaf, and stands exposed as the expression
of prejudice, opportunism and class interest it always was. And maybe,
just maybe, that sudden exposure will give us a chance to start doing
something about the depression we’re in.

A version of this op-ed appeared in print on April 29, 2013, on page
A21 of the New York edition with the headline: The Story Of Our Time.
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