The Perils of 2012: When Austerity Bites Back
by Joseph Stiglitz
Friday, January 13, 2012
The year 2011 will be remembered as the time when many
ever-optimistic Americans began to give
up hope. President John F. Kennedy once said that a rising tide lifts all
boats. But now, in the receding tide, Americans are beginning to see not only
that those with taller masts had been lifted far higher, but also that many of
the smaller boats had been dashed to pieces in their wake. In that brief moment
when the rising tide was indeed rising, millions of people believed that they
might have a fair chance of realizing the “American Dream.” Now those dreams,
too, are receding. By 2011, the savings of those who had lost their jobs in
2008 or 2009 had been spent. Unemployment checks had run out. Headlines
announcing new hiring – still not enough to keep pace with the number of those
who would normally have entered the labor force – meant little to the 50 year
olds with little hope of ever holding a job again. Indeed, middle-aged people
who thought that they would be unemployed for a few months have now realized
that they were, in fact, forcibly retired. Young people
who graduated from college with tens of thousands of dollars
of education debt cannot find any jobs at all. People who moved in with
friends and relatives have become homeless. Houses bought during the property boom are
still on the market or have been sold at a loss. More than seven million
American families have lost their homes.
The dark underbelly of the previous decade’s financial boom
has been fully exposed in Europe as well.
Dithering over Greece
and key national governments’ devotion to austerity began to exact a heavy toll
last year. Contagion spread to Italy .
Spain ’s
unemployment, which had been near 20% since the beginning of the recession,
crept even higher. The unthinkable – the end of the euro – began to seem like a
real possibility. This year is set to be even worse. It is possible, of course,
that the United States will solve its political problems and finally adopt
the stimulus measures that it needs to bring down unemployment to 6% or 7% (the
pre-crisis level of 4% or 5% is too much to hope for). But this is as unlikely
as it is that Europe will figure out that
austerity alone will not solve its problems.
On the contrary, austerity will only exacerbate the economic slowdown.
Without growth, the debt crisis – and the euro crisis – will only worsen. And
the long crisis that began with the collapse of the housing bubble in 2007 and
the subsequent recession will continue. Moreover, the major emerging-market
countries, which steered successfully through the storms of 2008 and 2009, may
not cope as well with the problems looming on the horizon. Brazil ’s growth has already stalled, fueling
anxiety among its neighbors in Latin America .
Meanwhile, long-term problems – including climate change and
other environmental threats, and increasing inequality in most countries around
the world – have not gone away. Some have grown more severe. For example, high
unemployment has depressed wages and increased poverty. The good news is that
addressing these long-term problems would actually help to solve the short-term
problems. Increased investment to retrofit the economy for global warming would
help to stimulate economic activity, growth, and job creation. More progressive
taxation, in effect redistributing income from the top to the middle and
bottom, would simultaneously reduce inequality and increase employment by
boosting total demand. Higher taxes at the top could generate revenues to
finance needed public investment, and to provide some social protection for
those at the bottom, including the unemployed. Even without widening the fiscal
deficit, such “balanced budget” increases in taxes and spending would lower
unemployment and increase output. The worry, however, is that politics and
ideology on both sides of the Atlantic, but especially in the US , will not
allow any of this to occur. Fixation on the deficit will induce cutbacks in
social spending, worsening inequality. Likewise, the enduring attraction of
supply-side economics, despite all of the evidence against it (especially in a
period in which there is high unemployment), will prevent raising taxes at the
top.
Even before the crisis, there was a rebalancing of economic
power – in fact, a correction of a 200-year historical anomaly, in which Asia ’s share of global GDP fell from nearly 50% to, at one point, below 10%. The
pragmatic commitment to growth that one sees in Asia
and other emerging markets today stands in contrast to the West’s misguided policies, which, driven by a
combination of ideology and vested interests, almost seem to reflect a commitment not to
grow. As a result, global economic rebalancing is likely to accelerate, almost
inevitably giving rise to political tensions. With all of the problems
confronting the global economy, we will be lucky if these strains do not begin
to manifest themselves within the next twelve months.
[It looks like we’ll be living through ‘interesting times’
for a little while longer. I do sometimes wonder if things will ever get back
to normal or if this is the beginning of a substantial change in the ways of
the world. I guess only time will tell.]
2 comments:
Too many people here are swayed by malarky designed to push their emotional buttons rather than encourage them to think. This is how we get a society that doesn't trust intelligent, educated people, this is how they're convinced that raising taxes on the wealthy is unpatriotic, and that any social program designed to help people in desperate need is a dirty handout. Political parties have gotten too good at convincing people to vote against their own interests and we've dumbed down society to such a degree, that I fear we may never recover.
v v said: Too many people here are swayed by malarky designed to push their emotional buttons rather than encourage them to think.
Probably because people in general have never been taught to think. Thinking leads to questions and questioning leads to all sorts of 'bad' things....
v v said: Political parties have gotten too good at convincing people to vote against their own interests...
That never ceases to amaze me - when you see people supporting those who throw them onto the street and don't care in they sink or swim... and they call it *freedom*.
v v said: we've dumbed down society to such a degree, that I fear we may never recover.
There does appear to be something going on ATM that indicates we need not be as sceptical as I usually am. Maybe, just maybe, people are *finally* waking up to the fact that they're being shafted every minute of every day by our supposed betters....
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