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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA cold cup of reality coffee from Paul Krugman
Paul Krugman Pours Ice Cold Water on Euro-Meltdown Relief
Before any of us properly got the chance to express relief over the absence of a complete catastrophe at last weeks EU summit, Paul Krugman comes along to pour cold water on the idea that the risk of a European-generated global recession has receded:
It comes as something of a shock, even for those of us who have been following the story all along, to realize that more than two years have passed since European leaders committed themselves to their current economic strategy a strategy based on the notion that fiscal austerity and internal devaluation (basically, wage cuts) would solve the problems of debtor nations. In all that time the strategy has produced no success stories; the best the defenders of orthodoxy can do is point to a couple of small Baltic nations that have seen partial recoveries from Depression-level slumps, but are still far poorer than they were before the crisis.
Meanwhile the euros crisis has metastasized, spreading from Greece to the far larger economies of Spain and Italy, and Europe as a whole is clearly sliding back into recession. Yet the policy prescriptions coming out of Berlin and Frankfurt have hardly changed at all.
But wait, you say didnt last weeks summit meeting produce some movement? Yes, it did. Germany gave a little ground, agreeing both to easier lending conditions for Italy and Spain (but not bond purchases by the European Central Bank) and to a rescue plan for private banks that might actually make some sense (although its hard to tell given the lack of detail). But these concessions remain tiny compared with the scale of the problems.
Meanwhile the euros crisis has metastasized, spreading from Greece to the far larger economies of Spain and Italy, and Europe as a whole is clearly sliding back into recession. Yet the policy prescriptions coming out of Berlin and Frankfurt have hardly changed at all.
But wait, you say didnt last weeks summit meeting produce some movement? Yes, it did. Germany gave a little ground, agreeing both to easier lending conditions for Italy and Spain (but not bond purchases by the European Central Bank) and to a rescue plan for private banks that might actually make some sense (although its hard to tell given the lack of detail). But these concessions remain tiny compared with the scale of the problems.
You can read the whole, depressing column, in which Krugman compares Europes Great Illusion with the belief of European elites just prior to the outbreak of World War I that modern economies had made war obsolete.
But the fundamental policy problem, he suggests, is one that obviously resonates with the bar to recovery faced by the United States, even without the Euro-crisis: the monomania of policymakers, most recently exhibited by the Fed, with the task of fighting non-existent inflation. ................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/1013922/paul_krugman_pours_ice_cold_water_on_euro-meltdown_relief/
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A cold cup of reality coffee from Paul Krugman (Original Post)
marmar
Jul 2012
OP
russspeakeasy
(6,539 posts)1. Thanks..."fighting non-exixtent inflation"
Austerity can't cure nations budget.....good read..
David__77
(23,553 posts)2. Bankruptcy is the solution!
Not "relief" and bailouts. Rebuild finance on new foundations after cleaning the financier sewage up.