Who is to blame for the coming downturn?
When Barack Obama took office, Paul Krugman urged him to emulate Franklin Roosevelt, and it looks as though Obama might just achieve what FDR did: have a depression within a depression.
As the economy begins another long and sad slide, Krugman is claiming that our government just did not spend enough money the past few years, and that is why we are headed south:
Back when the original 2009 Obama stimulus was enacted, some of us warned that it was both too small and too short-lived. In particular, the effects of the stimulus would start fading out in 2010 — and given the fact that financial crises are usually followed by prolonged slumps, it was unlikely that the economy would have a vigorous self-sustaining recovery under way by then.
Krugman’s retrospective is his usual self-aggrandizing nonsense, the idea being that had Obama borrowed and spent an extra trillion, dollars, Krugman then would have argued for two trillion, and had the administration dumped two trillion, Krugman would have demanded four. And so it goes.
What Krugman does not say is that like FDR, Obama went on a regulatory rampage, and on top of that, the government continues to pursue wars abroad and now openly admits to having CIA-sponsored death squads roaming the globe in search of the “bad guys.” Obama has openly demonstrated himself to be quite hostile to private enterprise (of the non-subsidized variety), and the government through the Federal Reserve System is showering the world with dollars, yet he wonders why U.S. business firms do not engage in long-range capital planning and expenditures.
As Robert Higgs notes in this excellent essay, the Roosevelt administration created huge amounts of “regime uncertainty,” which led to a slowdown of private investment. It seems that Obama, through his rhetoric, his initiatives, and the brazen hostility of Washington toward private investment, we are seeing a repeat.
Krugman, of course, won’t mention this point, and why should he? Keynesians believe that all we need to do is to shower an economy with money and everything else follows. Well, it doesn’t.
Check out the “Krugman in Wonderland” posts here on The Global Dispatch – click here
William L. Anderson is an author and an associate professor of economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland. He is also an adjunct scholar with the Mackinac Center for Public Policy as well as for the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Alabama.
Read more at “Krugman-in-Wonderland”