James K. Galbraith: We Told You So
Like many Americans, I was doing everything I could to help elect
Barack Obama. It wasn’t all that much—but as an economist in Texas, I
had some authority on the thinking of former Senator Phil Gramm, John
McCain’s chief economic adviser. I’d made the front page of the
Washington Post describing Gramm as a “sorcerer’s apprentice of
financial instability and disaster.” (Gramm, with a certain sense of
humor, denied it.) For that, and for my experience drafting policy
papers, I was in contact every few days with Obama’s economists.
To economists in my own circle, it had long been clear that the
financial crisis then unfolding was an epic event. We had watched the
subprime mortgage disaster build up. In August 2007 we knew the meltdown
had begun. Bear Stearns had failed. But for reasons that have to do
with the pace and rhythm of politics, these issues remained on the back
burner, the campaign being dominated by health care and the Iraq war.
For those of us on the outside, it was hard to know whether the insiders
understood what was coming.
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment