Paul Krugman: Europe's Austerity Madness
So much for complacency. Just a few days ago, the conventional wisdom
was that Europe finally had things under control. The European Central
Bank, by promising to buy the bonds of troubled governments if
necessary, had soothed markets. All that debtor nations had to do, the
story went, was agree to more and deeper austerity — the condition for
central bank loans — and all would be well.
But the purveyors of conventional wisdom forgot that people were
involved. Suddenly, Spain and Greece are being racked by strikes and
huge demonstrations. The public in these countries is, in effect, saying
that it has reached its limit: With unemployment at Great Depression
levels and with erstwhile middle-class workers reduced to picking through garbage in search of food, austerity has already gone too far. And this means that there may not be a deal after all.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
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