What Krugman & Stiglitz Can Tell Us
End This Depression Now!
by Paul Krugman
Norton, 259 pp., $24.95
The Price of Inequality: How Today’s Divided Society Endangers Our Future
by Joseph E. Stiglitz
Norton, 414 pp., $27.95
Five years after the onset of the financial crisis that badly damaged
the US economy, the nation remains mired in chronic joblessness. The
unemployment rate, stubbornly above 8 percent, actually makes the
situation look better than it is. Many millions have given up looking
for work and no longer figure in the statistics. Long-term unemployment
remains at levels unseen since the Great Depression. Young Americans are
entering the worst job market in at least a half-century. For both the
long-term unemployed and new job seekers, this sustained absence from
the workforce will have permanent effects on both their earnings and
their well-being. And not just theirs. We have all lost, and continue to
lose, from the prolonged mass idleness of potentially productive
workers.
Yet Washington is stuck in neutral. Worse than neutral; it is in
reverse. As the last elements of the 2009 stimulus phase out, the
initial flood of federal aid has slowed to a trickle. If no agreement is
reached before early next year, the trickle will become a huge backward
flow, as President Obama’s payroll tax cut and all the Bush tax cuts
expire while automatic spending cuts agreed to in previous legislative
sessions kick in. Already, Republican leaders are threatening to replay
last year’s standoff over the debt ceiling. Meanwhile, state and local
governments—prohibited from running sustained deficits, increasingly
dominated by anti-spending forces—continue to cut aid to those out of
work and slash programs that invest in the nation’s future while laying
off teachers and other public workers. Without those layoffs, the
current unemployment rate would probably be around 7 percent.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
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