Shlaes on Krugman and the "New Deal"
From Amity Shlaes in the WSJ...
It's difficult to understand why Krugman sticks to Old-Keynesian-style fiscal policy as a prescription for economic recovery. Perhaps he's just a statist and this is a convenient excuse to expand the State. He seems like a bright man-- at least in his field-- but his counsel here fits neither the data, economic theory, or common sense.
Paul Krugman of the New York Times has been on the attack lately in regard to the New Deal. His new book "The Return of Depression Economics," emphasizes the importance of New Deal-style spending. He has said the trouble with the New Deal was that it didn't spend enough.
He's also arguing that some writers and economists have been misrepresenting the 1930s to make the effect of FDR's overall policy look worse than it was. I'm interested in part because Mr. Krugman has mentioned me by name. He recently said that I am the one "whose misleading statistics have been widely disseminated on the right."
Mr. Krugman is a new Nobel Laureate, teaches at Princeton University and writes a column for a nationally prominent newspaper. So what he says is believed to be objective by many people, even when it isn't. But the larger reason we should care about the 1930s employment record is that the cure Roosevelt offered, the New Deal, is on everyone else's mind as well. In a recent "60 Minutes" interview, President-elect Barack Obama said, "keep in mind that 1932, 1933, the unemployment rate was 25%, inching up to 30%."
The New Deal is Mr. Obama's context for the giant infrastructure plan his new team is developing. If he proposes FDR-style recovery programs, then it is useful to establish whether those original programs actually brought recovery. The answer is, they didn't. New Deal spending provided jobs but did not get the country back to where it was before.
...one man in four was unemployed when Roosevelt took office. They show joblessness overall always above the 14% line from 1931 to 1940. Six years into the New Deal and its programs to create jobs or help organized labor, two in 10 men were unemployed....
What kept the picture so dark so long? Deflation for one, but also the notion that government could engineer economic recovery by favoring the public sector at the expense of the private sector. New Dealers raised taxes again and again to fund spending. The New Dealers also insisted on higher wages when businesses could ill afford them. Roosevelt, for example, signed into law first his National Recovery Administration, whose codes forced businesses to pay an above-market minimum wage, and then the Wagner Act, which gave union workers more power.As a result of such policy, pay for workers in the later 1930s was well above trend....High wages hurt corporate profits and therefore hiring. The unemployed stayed unemployed. "If you had a job you were all right" -- the phrase we all heard as children about the Depression -- really does capture the period.
Why does all this matter today? Because lawmakers are considering new labor legislation containing "card check," which would strengthen organized labor and so its wage demands. Because employees continue to pressure firms to spend on health care, without considering they may be making the company unable to hire an unemployed friend. Piling on public-sector jobs or raising wages may take away jobs in the private sector, directly or indirectly....
2 Comments:
Maybe he's on the propaganda take, which in my mind is another way of saying he's a statist.
For instance, why are food and gas not included in inflation numbers? Does anyone really believe the inflation numbers during the spring and summer were 3-4%. They've been 3-4% since I can remember because of monetary policy manipulation and bad reporting. When I bought gas and food this summer it sure felt like my dollars purchased a lot less than the year before.
Krugman strikes me as an insider propagandist- however, "intellectual" he is. Maybe he's not aware of it himself. He should have his own spot on MSNBC every day. He'd fit right in.
There are propagandists for all sorts of ideologies-- perhaps more for statists, but probably not.
Oil is typically taken out of the CPI as a separate statistic-- and then reported along with the full CPI. The reason for this is to separate its (potentially) special-- and specially variable impact on prices. That way, we can see "structural" inflation more easily.
In recent months, failing to separate out oil would have first over-estimated structural inflation and then under-estimated it.
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