This is a decent synopsis of standard Econ 101 principles  --except  that 
the article
misses a crucial point. Public policy that relates to the economy has to be 
 rational
with respect to economic objectives. About this, neither party has been  
more than
partly rational. We live in a post Keynes AND post laissez faire world.  
Neither
system works any more except occasionally. Keynes cannot work when  deficits
go orbital, laissez faire cannot work when the playing field consists of  
cyberspace
and no longer resembles a chessboard. It especially cannot work when  some
of the players are tyrannosaurus rex, others are herd animals like cows,  
and
many others are ants or bacteria.
 
However, in politics everyone wants simple answers. And the answers they  
prefer
must be connected to ideologies that can attract votes. Plus it is assumed  
that
the ideologies must be in place  --traditional in some way--   because it is
too difficult to either think through a new economic paradigm or it  asks
voters to understand something new, which they ( presumably )
cannot do .
 
That is, the whole approach we take for granted in US politics is  
anti-science.
Instead of seeking new solutions based on objective merits, and that  
require a 
good deal of hard research, it assumes a paradigm based on  economic 
stereotypes. 
It assumes that education is impossible, that multitudes cannot learn much  
of anything 
and must be appealed to  only  via slogans and  one-liners and reference to 
truisms
or popular stories that have been promoted by special interests.
 
The whole purpose of Radical Centrism is to prove all of this wrong.
 
Billy
 
===================================================
 
 
 
LA Times
 
 
Op-Ed 
The wrong budget analogy
The federal budget is not like a household budget, and it's misguided to 
try  to apply similar austerity measures given the shaky economy.

 
 
By Bill  Craighead  
August 24,  2011

Washington's renewed obsession with government budget deficits has become a 
 major obstacle to dealing with the U.S. unemployment crisis. At the root 
of this  misplaced focus are widespread misconceptions about the role of 
deficits in the  economy.

The fact that high unemployment and budget deficits are  occurring at the 
same time has generated confusion about the real sources of the  slump. The 
increased deficit is a consequence, not a cause, of the downturn.  When 
economic activity falls, so does tax revenue. Some categories of government  
spending, such as unemployment benefits, automatically rise during a recession. 
 
This contributes to a higher deficit.

Politicians of both parties have  furthered the misunderstanding by 
frequently drawing an analogy between the  federal budget and household 
budgets. 
"Families across this country understand  what it takes to manage a budget," 
President Obama declared in a February radio  broadcast. "Well, it's time 
Washington acted as responsibly as our families do."  While this comparison 
appeals to a general belief that we should "live within  our means," it's also 
misleading.

Decisions about the federal budget are  fundamentally different from those 
of individual households, because  policymakers need to account for how 
their choices affect the economy as a  whole. It is more appropriate to liken 
government budget deficits to _prescription  medicine_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/health/drugs-medicines/prescription-drugs-HEDAR00000155.topic)
 . Just 
as medication can be helpful to a sick patient, deficits can  aid a failing 
economy.

The U.S. economy slumped largely because of a  reduction in spending by 
households and businesses. For households, this was a  reasonable response to 
declining property values, job losses and insecurity.  Likewise, it made 
sense for firms to cut back on investment as their customers  spent less. If 
the 
federal government were to act this way, though, it would  reinforce the 
decline in economic activity, not alleviate it.

To  stabilize the economy, the federal government needs to counterbalance 
the swings  in consumer and business expenditures by moving in the opposite 
direction. When  consumers and firms cut back, government can help replace 
the lost economic  activity through direct spending (on infrastructure 
projects, for example) and  through indirect means, such as tax cuts, which 
increase households' disposable  income.

This idea of "counter-cyclical" policy was the basic principle  behind the 
tax cuts and spending in the stimulus bill of early 2009, as well as  the 
one-year payroll tax cut agreed to as part of the budget deal at the end of  
2010. Though the stimulus proved inadequate in scale, it helped reduce the 
depth  of the downturn. Without it, the unemployment rate in 2010 would have 
been  between 0.7 and 1.7 percentage points higher, according to an estimate 
by the  nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. That is, the economy has 
been lousy,  but it would have been considerably worse without government 
action.

In  short, the fact that the government is taking in less in tax revenue 
than it is  spending is helping, not hurting, the economy. Immediate large 
spending cuts or  tax increases to close the budget gap would be a severe blow 
to an already weak  recovery.

This does not mean that deficits are always harmless. Like  prescription 
medications, large deficits are appropriate only under certain  circumstances. 
In a healthy economy, large-scale government borrowing can drive  up 
interest rates and draw money away from private business investment. This is  
the 
main reason governments should not run large deficits when the economy is  
operating near capacity. The fact that long-term interest rates are at their  
lowest level in decades — and have remained so despite Standard & Poor's  
downgrade — shows this is not a problem now.

After the economy recovers,  it will be responsible to reduce the federal 
government's borrowing. Doing so  will require some difficult choices about 
taxation, defense spending and social  insurance programs. Such discussions 
about the role of government in society  arouse passionate feelings but, 
right now, are a distraction from the more  immediate task of reviving the 
economy. It is a mistake to become entangled in a  debate about taking away the 
medicine when the patient is still in the  sickbed.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------
Bill  Craighead teaches courses in macroeconomics and international 
economics at _Wesleyan  University_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/education/colleges-universities/wesleyan-university-OREDU0000162.topic)
  and writes the blog 
Twenty-Cent Paradigms. 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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