So, about that fiscal crisis — the one that would, any day now, turn US into Greece. Greece, I tell you: Never mind.
Over the past few weeks, there has been a remarkable change of position  among the deficit scolds who have dominated economic policy debate for  more than three years. It’s as if someone sent out a memo saying that  the Chicken Little act, with its repeated warnings of a U.S. debt crisis  that keeps not happening, has outlived its usefulness. Suddenly, the  argument has changed: It’s not about the crisis next month; it’s about  the long run, about not cheating our children. The deficit, we’re told,  is really a moral issue.
There’s just one problem: The new argument is as bad as the old one.  Yes, we are cheating our children, but the deficit has nothing to do  with it.
Before I get there, a few words about the sudden switch in arguments.
There  has, of course, been no explicit announcement of a change in position.  But the signs are everywhere. Pundits who spent years trying to foster a  sense of panic over the deficit have begun writing pieces lamenting the  likelihood that there won’t be a crisis, after all.
Maybe it wasn’t  that significant when President Barack Obama declared that we don’t face  any “immediate” debt crisis, but it did represent a change in tone from  his previous deficit-hawk rhetoric. And it was startling, indeed, when  John Boehner, the speaker of the House, said exactly the same thing a  few days later.
What happened? Basically, the numbers refuse to  cooperate: Interest rates remain stubbornly low, deficits are declining  and even 10-year budget projections basically show a stable fiscal  outlook rather than exploding debt.
So talk of a fiscal crisis  has subsided. Yet the deficit scolds haven’t given up on their  determination to bully the nation into slashing Social Security and  Medicare. So they have a new line: We must bring down the deficit right  away because it’s “generational warfare,” imposing a crippling burden on  the next generation.
What’s wrong with this argument? For one thing, it involves a fundamental misunderstanding of what debt does to the economy.
Contrary  to almost everything you read in the papers or see on TV, debt doesn’t  directly make our nation poorer; it’s essentially money we owe to  ourselves. Deficits would indirectly be making us poorer if they were  either leading to big trade deficits, increasing our overseas borrowing,  or crowding out investment, reducing future productive capacity. But  they aren’t: Trade deficits are down, not up, while business investment  has actually recovered fairly strongly from the slump.
And the main  reason businesses aren’t investing more is inadequate demand. They’re  sitting on lots of cash, despite soaring profits, because there’s no  reason to expand capacity when you aren’t selling enough to use the  capacity you have. In fact, you can think of deficits mainly as a way to  put some of that idle cash to use.
Yet there is, as I said, a  lot of truth to the charge that we’re cheating our children. How? By  neglecting public investment and failing to provide jobs.
You  don’t have to be a civil engineer to realize that America needs more and  better infrastructure, but the latest “report card” from the American  Society of Civil Engineers — with its tally of deficient dams, bridges,  and more, and its overall grade of D+ — still makes startling and  depressing reading. And right now, with vast numbers of unemployed  construction workers and vast amounts of cash sitting idle, would be a  great time to rebuild our infrastructure.
Yet public investment has  actually plunged since the slump began.
Or what about investing  in our young? We’re cutting back there, too, having laid off hundreds of  thousands of schoolteachers and slashed the aid that used to make  college affordable for children of less-affluent families.
Last  but not least, think of the waste of human potential caused by high  unemployment among younger Americans — for example, among recent college  graduates who can’t start their careers and will probably never make up  the lost ground.
And why are we shortchanging the future so  dramatically and inexcusably?
Blame the deficit scolds, who weep  crocodile tears over the supposed burden of debt on the next generation,  but whose constant inveighing against the risks of government  borrowing, by undercutting political support for public investment and  job creation, has done far more to cheat our children than deficits ever  did.
Fiscal policy is, indeed, a moral issue, and we should be  ashamed of what we’re doing to the next generation’s economic prospects.  But our sin involves investing too little, not borrowing too much — and  the deficit scolds, for all their claims to have our children’s  interests at heart, are actually the bad guys in this story.
By Paul Krugman
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Showing posts with label US Fiscal deficit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US Fiscal deficit. Show all posts
Sunday, March 31, 2013
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