Hi.  I want to apologize for the multiple copies of my messages, over the
past few days.  I've

spoken with Earthlink's fixit representatives, several times, and am now in
touch with specialists,

who have given this baffling problem a priority. They also suspect a hacker.
As of now, I'm sending

out much smaller numbers of different addresses in the mailings, though they
don't think that's the

problem.  Anyway, I beg your indulgence and ask you use the delete key for
duplications.  I'll be

aware of its continuance, as I also get the repetitions.  I'll get back to
you on this, very soon.

Ed

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/11/opinion/11krugman.html?nl=todaysheadlines
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/11/opinion/11krugman.html?nl=todaysheadlines
&emc=tha212> &emc=tha212

 


No, We Can't? Or Won't?


Paul Krugman

NY Times Op-Ed: July 11, 2011

 

If you were shocked by Friday's job report, if you thought we were doing
well and were taken aback by the bad news, you haven't been paying
attention. The fact is, the United States economy has been stuck in a rut
for a year and a half. 

 

Yet a destructive passivity has overtaken our discourse. Turn on your TV and
you'll see some self-satisfied pundit declaring that nothing much can be
done about the economy's short-run problems (reminder: this "short run" is
now in its fourth year), that we should focus on the long run instead. 

This gets things exactly wrong. The truth is that creating jobs in a
depressed economy is something government could and should be doing. Yes,
there are huge political obstacles to action - notably, the fact that the
House is controlled by a party that benefits from the economy's weakness.
But political gridlock should not be conflated with economic reality. 

Our failure to create jobs is a choice, not a necessity - a choice
rationalized by an ever-shifting set of excuses. 

Excuse No. 1: Just around the corner, there's a rainbow in the sky. 

Remember "green shoots"? Remember the "summer of recovery"? Policy makers
keep declaring that the economy is on the mend - and Lucy keeps snatching
the football away. Yet these delusions of recovery have been an excuse for
doing nothing as the jobs crisis festers. 

Excuse No. 2: Fear the bond market. 

Two years ago The Wall Street Journal declared that interest rates on United
States debt would soon soar unless Washington stopped trying to fight the
economic slump. Ever since, warnings about the imminent attack of the "bond
vigilantes" have been used to attack any spending on job creation. 

But basic economics said that rates would stay low as long as the economy
was depressed - and basic economics was right. The interest rate on 10-year
bonds was 3.7 percent when The Wall Street Journal issued that warning; at
the end of last week it was 3.03 percent. 

How have the usual suspects responded? By inventing their own reality. Last
week, Representative Paul Ryan, the man behind the G.O.P. plan to dismantle
Medicare, declared that we must slash government spending to "take pressure
off the interest rates" - the same pressure, I suppose, that has pushed
those rates to near-record lows. 

Excuse No. 3: It's the workers' fault. 

Unemployment soared during the financial crisis and its aftermath. So it
seems bizarre to argue that the real problem lies with the workers - that
the millions of Americans who were working four years ago but aren't working
now somehow lack the skills the economy needs. 

Yet that's what you hear from many pundits these days: high unemployment is
"structural," they say, and requires long-term solutions (which means, in
practice, doing nothing). 

Well, if there really was a mismatch between the workers we have and the
workers we need, workers who do have the right skills, and are therefore
able to find jobs, should be getting big wage increases. They aren't. In
fact, average wages actually fell last month. 

Excuse No. 4: We tried to stimulate the economy, and it didn't work. 

Everybody knows that President Obama tried to stimulate the economy with a
huge increase in government spending, and that it didn't work. But what
everyone knows is wrong. 

Think about it: Where are the big public works projects? Where are the
armies of government workers? There are actually half a million fewer
government employees now than there were when Mr. Obama took office. 

So what happened to the stimulus? Much of it consisted of tax cuts, not
spending. Most of the rest consisted either of aid to distressed families or
aid to hard-pressed state and local governments. This aid may have mitigated
the slump, but it wasn't the kind of job-creation program we could and
should have had. This isn't 20-20 hindsight: some of us warned from the
beginning that tax cuts would be ineffective and that the proposed spending
was woefully inadequate. And so it proved. 

It's also worth noting that in another area where government could make a
big difference - help for troubled homeowners - almost nothing has been
done. The Obama administration's program of mortgage relief has gone
nowhere: of $46 billion allotted to help families stay in their homes, less
than $2 billion has actually been spent. 

So let's summarize: The economy isn't fixing itself. Nor are there real
obstacles to government action: both the bond vigilantes and structural
unemployment exist only in the imaginations of pundits. And if stimulus
seems to have failed, it's because it was never actually tried. 

Listening to what supposedly serious people say about the economy, you'd
think the problem was "no, we can't." But the reality is "no, we won't." And
every pundit who reinforces that destructive passivity is part of the
problem. 

 

  _____  

No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 10.0.1388 / Virus Database: 1516/3761 - Release Date: 07/12/11

  _____  

No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 10.0.1388 / Virus Database: 1516/3761 - Release Date: 07/12/11

  _____  

No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 10.0.1388 / Virus Database: 1516/3761 - Release Date: 07/12/11



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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