Here’s an easy
question, one that even the most brain dead, biased and unthinking
economist can easily get the answer to.
What happens when an economy significantly cuts government
spending?
The Answer, you get Greece . Don’t like that answer, ok, you get Spain . Still not happy, you get Britain . Need more countries, try Ireland , Italy
and Portugal . Yes, all of these countries undertook drastic
cuts in government spending and all of these countries are experiencing low or
negative growth and rising unemployment.
All experienced the result everyone would expect.
The reason this is
relevant is that former Bush administration economic advisor Edward Lazear
writes in the Wall Street Journal and makes
this astounding stupid statement.
·
OPINION
·
May 20, 2012, 6:19 p.m. ET
Edward Lazear: Three Views
of the 'Fiscal Cliff'
It's the tax
increases we have to fear. Spending cuts won't hurt the economy.
Really, he does.
Here is his phony, lousy, stupid, incorrect basis for this
astounding statement. First of all he
makes a statement about “until recently”.
Until recently, most
economists believed that fiscal policy was inappropriate for business-cycle
management, and that if stimulus was needed at all, monetary policy was the
best way.
which is true, if one interprets ‘until recently’ to mean
1935. He then goes on to say this.
But even if a fiscal
stimulus has some benefit, the cost of fiscal policy is likely to be very
large. In order to stimulate the economy, growth in—not high levels
of—government spending is required. To provide a stimulus in 2013 comparable to
the 2009 legislated stimulus, we would need to increase government spending by
about $250 billion.
But the Keynesian
view implies that keeping spending constant at the higher level in 2014 would
generate no stimulative growth effect for 2014. Despite the higher level of
spending in 2014, we would get no additional growth because there is no
increase in spending over the 2013 level. Were we to retreat to current levels
of spending, there would be a contractionary effect on the economy as
government spending decreases. If we want to delay our day of reckoning, we
must keep spending at a higher level for each year that we want to postpone the
negative consequences for growth. Given the state of the labor market, this
could mean a few years. If we waited four years, we would spend $1 trillion to
get $250 billion in stimulus.
This is the logic of an economist who has never ever
studied economics. The stimulative impact
of government spending serves to drive economic growth. When that happens the private sector responds
by increasing investment and employment.
That private spending gradually takes over for the federal spending, allowing
the government to reduce its stimulus spending, with the ensuing increases in
tax revenues ultimately reducing the deficit.
Don’t believe it, check the textbooks, it’s in all of
them. Want empirical proof, see economic
resulst, 1993-2000. Want more empirical
results about the failure of tax cuts as effective policy, see Bush, George W.
Want to read the Village Idiot’s Guide to Economics, see
Lazear, Edward. He is the author and he
speaks from personal experience.
This article, TDPE, is another example of why I love your posts. That an economist writes about the idiots of the profession, only makes your point that much more compelling. You're right, he's an idiot! Love the 1935 reference!
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