What Do Super Committee Economics and Medieval Blood-Letting Have in Common? They Both Kill the Patient.
By Marshall Auerback, AlterNet
Posted on November 19, 2011, Printed on November 20, 2011
The bipartisan super committee will probably fail to meet the
self-imposed November 23rd deadline to enact $1.2trillion of cuts over
the next ten years. That failure, as Paul Krugman notes in the New York Times,
is a good thing: “Any deal reached now would almost surely end up
worsening the economic slump. Slashing spending while the economy is
depressed destroys jobs, and it’s probably even counterproductive in
terms of deficit reduction, since it leads to lower revenue both now and
in the future.”
If the super committee fails to come up with an alternative plan by
Thanksgiving, the cuts will hit defense and domestic programs equally.
But those cuts won’t begin to go into effect until January 2013, two
months after next fall’s election, which also means that the programmed
fiscal restriction planned for next year won't come into effect. The
likelihood of failure is provoking a negative reaction in both the
markets and the mainstream press. But in spite of that, failure might be
the difference between sluggish, moderate growth in the U.S. and double
dip recession.
Sunday, November 20, 2011
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