Paul Krugman: The US Can Learn from Canada’s 1990s Slump
So, is there still a lot of slack in the United States' labor
markets? On the face of it, that seems an absurd question to ask, given
the persistence of very high unemployment and an employment-population
ratio far below pre-crisis levels.
Yet it is being asked, partly because we don't see strong evidence of falling inflation.
But how good a criterion is that? Sharply rising inflation would be
one thing — but we don't see that either. And there's actually pretty
good evidence that inflation tends to stall out at low but positive
levels in the face of prolonged slumps.
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment