Let's not all go ding-donging just yet, people. The austerity witch is not quite dead.
Supporters of austerity have certainly been knocked back recently, but that has done nothing to shake their belief that government spending is an evil that must be stopped, no matter how many children starve in the process.
There was great excitement among the Munchkins (a/k/a us econo-nerds on Twitter) on Monday morning over a couple of exciting new developments in the war between pro- and anti-austerity factions. First, European Commission President José Manuel Barroso declared that austerity was perhaps not the best approach to solving Europe's endless economic problems anymore, mainly because everybody hates it now.
"While I think this policy is fundamentally right, I think it has reached its limits," Mr. Barroso said. "A policy to be successful not only has to be properly designed, it has to have the minimum of political and social support."
Separately, Bill Gross, co-founder and Chief Author of Stoned Investment Letters at Pacific Investment Management Co., the world's biggest bond fund, declared his opposition to austerity in the Financial Times.
“The UK and almost all of Europe have erred in terms of believing that austerity, fiscal austerity in the short term, is the way to produce real growth. It is not,” Mr Gross told the Financial Times. “You’ve got to spend money.”
Ninety-nine percent of you are probably thinking, "Bill Who?" But just take my word for it, that when the world's most famous bond investor, a species genetically predisposed to worry about debtors getting deeper in debt, says that maybe a little bit more government debt wouldn't be such a bad thing, then that is big-ish news.
These developments follow last week's bombshell news that a paper by Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, a precious touchstone for the pro-austerity crowd, was full of errors. That revelation, in a new paper by Thomas Herndon, a graduate student at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, was a grave blow to the intellectual underpinnings of austerity.
"The austerity movement is crumbling," declared Business Insider's Joe Weisenthal on Monday morning, a sentiment expressed by the New Yorker's John Cassidy and others, particularly in the Twittersphere.
If only! While we're all high-fiving each other over the death of austerity, the austerity proponents are saying that absolutely nothing has changed.
For one thing, Reinhart and Rogoff are sticking to their flawed spreadsheets. They claim that Herndon's paper didn't negate their core finding, that economic growth slows when government debt gets above 90 percent of gross domestic product. (Herndon has since responded to their response, saying that, yes, in fact, his paper does actually refute that claim. And one of his professors, Arindrajit Dube, notes that Reinhart and Rogoff's strong, strong hint that the high debt caused the slow growth might very well be precisely backwards.)
Tireless debt scold Erskine Bowles, when confronted with the flaws in Reinhart-Rogoff, a paper he has cited repeatedly, basically said, "Eh, what are you gonna do?" He said those flaws did not at all change his mind about the need for austerity, the Hill reported on Friday.
Undaunted by the Reinhart-Rogoff scandal, Bowles and his Misery Twin, Alan Simpson, dragged out the corpse of their Grand-Bargain deficit-reduction plan for yet another public viewing last week, trying to drum up support for still more austerity.
The pro-austerians at the G-20 meetings in Washington might be scrapping the 90-percent threshold number gifted to them in 2010 by Reinhart-Rogoff, but they are simply reverting to the same arguments they made in 2009 and every year before that, the FT reports.
The Washington Post editorial board on Monday not only said that Reinhart-Rogoff didn't matter at all to its pro-austerity views, but that it still thinks we need even "more aggressive" debt reduction than that sought by the Simpson-Bowles Grand Bargaineers.
Meanwhile, the real-world effects of austerity are still with us, causing no end of human misery. The U.S. has spent the past two years in the most dramatic belt-tightening since the end of the Vietnam war, helping keep unemployment high and economic growth sluggish. The absolute lunacy of the fiscal-cliff deal, including a payroll-tax increase and the draconian budget cuts of the sequester, will carve 1.5 percent from U.S. economic growth this year and cost hundreds of thousands of jobs. Despite this pain and the excitement over Reinhart-Rogoff in the Twitterverse, there is no sign of any anti-austerity action in the halls of Congress or the White House.
In Europe, where austerity proved itself a miserable failure years before the Reinhart-Rogoff debunking, there has been a slow shift toward more growth and less austerity as a solution.
But the shift away from austerity has been small, and far too slow to prevent, say, the starvation of Greek children. Unfortunately, the Wall Street Journal reports that European policy makers are responding just like Erskine Bowles: "Eh, what are you gonna do?" That's because the austerity fanatics in the European Union, led by Germany, still believe their approach is the only solution.
Germany, Bowles, Simpson, the Washington Post, Peter G. Peterson and all the rest of the world's deficit scolds were scolding long before the Reinhart-Rogoff paper, and will likely keep on scolding after its death. It is going to take more than one bad week to slow them down.
Original Article
Source: huffingtonpost.com
Author: Mark Gongloff
Supporters of austerity have certainly been knocked back recently, but that has done nothing to shake their belief that government spending is an evil that must be stopped, no matter how many children starve in the process.
There was great excitement among the Munchkins (a/k/a us econo-nerds on Twitter) on Monday morning over a couple of exciting new developments in the war between pro- and anti-austerity factions. First, European Commission President José Manuel Barroso declared that austerity was perhaps not the best approach to solving Europe's endless economic problems anymore, mainly because everybody hates it now.
"While I think this policy is fundamentally right, I think it has reached its limits," Mr. Barroso said. "A policy to be successful not only has to be properly designed, it has to have the minimum of political and social support."
Separately, Bill Gross, co-founder and Chief Author of Stoned Investment Letters at Pacific Investment Management Co., the world's biggest bond fund, declared his opposition to austerity in the Financial Times.
“The UK and almost all of Europe have erred in terms of believing that austerity, fiscal austerity in the short term, is the way to produce real growth. It is not,” Mr Gross told the Financial Times. “You’ve got to spend money.”
Ninety-nine percent of you are probably thinking, "Bill Who?" But just take my word for it, that when the world's most famous bond investor, a species genetically predisposed to worry about debtors getting deeper in debt, says that maybe a little bit more government debt wouldn't be such a bad thing, then that is big-ish news.
These developments follow last week's bombshell news that a paper by Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, a precious touchstone for the pro-austerity crowd, was full of errors. That revelation, in a new paper by Thomas Herndon, a graduate student at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, was a grave blow to the intellectual underpinnings of austerity.
"The austerity movement is crumbling," declared Business Insider's Joe Weisenthal on Monday morning, a sentiment expressed by the New Yorker's John Cassidy and others, particularly in the Twittersphere.
If only! While we're all high-fiving each other over the death of austerity, the austerity proponents are saying that absolutely nothing has changed.
For one thing, Reinhart and Rogoff are sticking to their flawed spreadsheets. They claim that Herndon's paper didn't negate their core finding, that economic growth slows when government debt gets above 90 percent of gross domestic product. (Herndon has since responded to their response, saying that, yes, in fact, his paper does actually refute that claim. And one of his professors, Arindrajit Dube, notes that Reinhart and Rogoff's strong, strong hint that the high debt caused the slow growth might very well be precisely backwards.)
Tireless debt scold Erskine Bowles, when confronted with the flaws in Reinhart-Rogoff, a paper he has cited repeatedly, basically said, "Eh, what are you gonna do?" He said those flaws did not at all change his mind about the need for austerity, the Hill reported on Friday.
Undaunted by the Reinhart-Rogoff scandal, Bowles and his Misery Twin, Alan Simpson, dragged out the corpse of their Grand-Bargain deficit-reduction plan for yet another public viewing last week, trying to drum up support for still more austerity.
The pro-austerians at the G-20 meetings in Washington might be scrapping the 90-percent threshold number gifted to them in 2010 by Reinhart-Rogoff, but they are simply reverting to the same arguments they made in 2009 and every year before that, the FT reports.
The Washington Post editorial board on Monday not only said that Reinhart-Rogoff didn't matter at all to its pro-austerity views, but that it still thinks we need even "more aggressive" debt reduction than that sought by the Simpson-Bowles Grand Bargaineers.
Meanwhile, the real-world effects of austerity are still with us, causing no end of human misery. The U.S. has spent the past two years in the most dramatic belt-tightening since the end of the Vietnam war, helping keep unemployment high and economic growth sluggish. The absolute lunacy of the fiscal-cliff deal, including a payroll-tax increase and the draconian budget cuts of the sequester, will carve 1.5 percent from U.S. economic growth this year and cost hundreds of thousands of jobs. Despite this pain and the excitement over Reinhart-Rogoff in the Twitterverse, there is no sign of any anti-austerity action in the halls of Congress or the White House.
In Europe, where austerity proved itself a miserable failure years before the Reinhart-Rogoff debunking, there has been a slow shift toward more growth and less austerity as a solution.
But the shift away from austerity has been small, and far too slow to prevent, say, the starvation of Greek children. Unfortunately, the Wall Street Journal reports that European policy makers are responding just like Erskine Bowles: "Eh, what are you gonna do?" That's because the austerity fanatics in the European Union, led by Germany, still believe their approach is the only solution.
Germany, Bowles, Simpson, the Washington Post, Peter G. Peterson and all the rest of the world's deficit scolds were scolding long before the Reinhart-Rogoff paper, and will likely keep on scolding after its death. It is going to take more than one bad week to slow them down.
Original Article
Source: huffingtonpost.com
Author: Mark Gongloff
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