Austerity has never worked
It's not just about the current economic environment. History shows that slashing budgets always leads to recession
Ha-Joon Chang
guardian.co.uk, Monday 4 June 2012 17.14 EDT
Last week saw a string of bad economic news reports. The eurozone
leaders seem unwilling or unable to change from their austerity
policies, even as Greece and Spain fall apart and the core eurozone economies contract. Britain watches on as its economy is heading for the third consecutive quarter of contraction,
with an unexpectedly sharp fall in manufacturing. Last week's jobs
figures confirmed that the US recovery is stuttering. The largest
developing economies that have so far provided some support for world
demand levels – especially India and Brazil but even China – are slowing
down too. Four years after the financial crisis began, many rich
capitalist economies have not recovered their pre-crisis output levels.
Even more serious is the unemployment problem. The International Labour Organisation
estimates there are 60 million fewer people employed worldwide than if
the pre-crisis trend had continued. In countries like Spain and Greece,
overall jobless rates are approaching 25%, with youth unemployment over
50%. Even in countries experiencing "milder" unemployment problems, like
the US and the UK, between 8% and 10% are out of work. If we include
those who have given up looking for jobs or those who are forced to work
part-time for want of fulltime opportunities, "real" unemployment could
be easily over 15% even in these countries.
Friday, June 8, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment