Roman Catholics believe that the pope is infallible on
matters of faith and morals.
Paul Krugman believes that Paul Krugman is infallible on all
matters except faith and morals.
The Princeton professor, Nobel prize winner, New York Times columnist, and favorite
of Barack Obama, is about to publish a new book explaining how the Federal
Reserve can erase our economic misery by promoting more and better inflation.
To spare us the pain of having to read it the Times has published an excerpt.
In it Krugman concludes:
Consider,
if you will, the current state of our nation. Despite hints of economic
progress, we’re still in the midst of an immense disaster, in which
unemployment and underemployment are devastating millions of American lives.
And none of this need be happening! There has been no plague of locusts; we
have not lost our technological know-how. Americans should be richer, not
poorer, than they were five years ago. Yet economic policy across the board has
become almost passive, has essentially accepted this disaster instead of trying
to end it.
If you sense that these words are hiding something, you
would be correct.
In this passage and in the excerpts published in the Times, Krugman is obfuscating how much
the Obama administration and the Democratic Congress of 2009-2010 are
responsible for producing these conditions.
While granting absolute power to the Federal Reserve Krugman
slips and uses the term “economic policy,” the province of the president and
Congress instead of “fiscal policy,” the province of Krugman’s former Princeton
colleague.
But Krugman has another reason for wanting us all to believe
that the current crisis is unnecessary. It happens that Krugman himself was one
of the leading architects of the financial crisis.
In 2002, after the tech bubble popped, Krugman went on the
record to plead with then-Fed Chairman Greenspan to solve the nation’s economic
problems by engineering a “housing bubble.”
In Krugman’s words:
The
basic point is that the recession of 2001 wasn't a typical postwar slump,
brought on when an inflation-fighting Fed raises interest rates and easily
ended by a snapback in housing and consumer spending when the Fed brings rates
back down again. This was a prewar-style recession, a morning after brought on
by irrational exuberance. To fight this recession the Fed needs more than a
snapback; it needs soaring household spending to offset moribund business
investment. And to do that, as Paul McCulley of Pimco put it, Alan Greenspan
needs to create a housing bubble to replace the Nasdaq bubble.
Did the Fed create a housing bubble because Krugman told it
to do so?
We cannot say for certain, but Krugman does exercise
outsized influence in such matters.
Now that the Krugman-encouraged housing bubble has nearly
destroyed the world financial system the shameless and bubbleheaded Krugman is
back telling the new Chairman of the Federal Reserve to solve the problem by
creating yet another bubble—a monetary bubble.
By definition, inflating the currency must produce a bubble,
don’t you think?.
Would you buy a used fiscal policy from this man?
Being Paul Krugman means never having to say you’re sorry.
1 comment:
Thank you for your through and timely comments on my response. I was not aware that you were that you were a "recovering" therapist/analyst. But that does help th elevel or our conversation and perhaps the level of the coaching services you provide.
In your "recovery" I hope you would be less binary, pitting (classical, traditional) psychoanalysis "vs" others. In truth, as you know, many therapists are "psychodynamic", not classically analytic. Perhaps you left the field yourself because you saw no way thru the common (tho not required) rigitities.
IMHO, there is "eclectic" (hodge-podge) and also (no binary, rather continuum) synthetic.
I don't want to have this turned into a metaphysical and metapsychological conversation (it certainly could, even should) but that is not the purpose of your blog.
Somehow you have morphed my words into "eclectic" into "dilettante" which is your spin, not mine. (and of course your approach is "better", tho you don't know my approach).
As you say (and I somewhat agree) "effective therapists treat them by doing something akin to coaching." So lets not do this useless (classical) (largely outdated) psychoanalysis "vs." CBT, "vs' coaching. But remember that effectiveness is related to goals, expectations and relationships between participants, not to "models on paper."
In many ways I would like to continue this conversation, I think we both have informed and vauable things to say. It is not either/or, or "mine is better than yours.
PS: I am not a "he", I am a "she."
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