heatseeker wrote:
cry of the banshee wrote:
Wish I had the energy to fully respond to this, but advocating differing policies in 2002 and today isn't flip-flopping...what's best for the economy depends on the situation, and obviously today is a much different situation from ten years ago.
I clicked the first 3 links and they all had holes in the economic logic--I'll just go at the first one, which talks about Krugman's supposed flip-flop on deficits. In 2002, he argued against tax cuts because it could cause a deficit of $3 trillion. Now, he's arguing for more government spending and not worrying about the deficit. Problems with this:
1. Difference in deficit between $3 trillion and $1.8 trillion. $1.8 trillion is conceivably sustainable, $3 trillion not so much
2. When the economy is in the tank, stimulus (government spending) is much more important than worrying about a sustainable deficit--whence, a different economic situation between when the two articles were written
3. Interest rates won't go up in an economy like this. In fact, they're as low as possible...so you don't have to worry about the deficit in that regard
Plus, there's the simple rule that economic policy CHANGES. It changes depending on the situation of the economy, with the latest economic literature, etc. It's not reasonable to expect an economist to be 100% consistent over the course of a 10 year period.
1.8 trillion is "concievably sustainable", while 3 trillion is "not so much"? It's only a 1.2 trillion difference.
Come on, man. Neither is conceivably sustainable. I'd actually have some repsect for the guy (even if I disagree with his poltics) if he was consistent. When you are in the trillions range, where lines get really blurred, economic theories don't just shift 180 degrees, or even shift much at all.
All I am asking for is a little honesty here.
I undersatnd he is a cult figure to you guys (must be those peepers), but the fact is his economic policy changes according to which party is in the white house. Coincidence? I doubt it. I guess we'll have to wait and see what his economic policy is when the next neo-con gets the WH.
My guess it will not be in accordance with that administrations policy.
Make all the excuses you want, but his partisanship is glaringly obvious.