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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: What about austerity?. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

What about austerity?
by noteworthy at 8:39 am EDT, Oct 2, 2008

Last week, I wrote:

The larger question is, does this crisis demand anything more than our money? Is it just about getting Unstuck and going back to business as usual? After we give everything (again), then what?

Yesterday, Juan Enriquez and Jorge Dominguez wrote in the Boston Globe:

Within the billions of sentences about the financial bailout there is one word notably absent, austerity. All talk is of payments, supports, subsidies, incurring more debt, stimulus packages. The thesis seems to be: If only we spend more the party can go on. True, only if the financial meltdown is a temporary mismatch and dislocation in housing and credit markets. But suppose there is something fundamentally wrong with the US economy. Then spending more will not fix it. Getting the diagnosis right means getting the treatment right. It may save us a trillion or two.

A solution requires the country to begin to spend what it earns, reduce its mountainous debt, and address massive liabilities, restructure Social Security, pension deficits, military, and Medicare. No wonder politicians would rather spend more of your money now rather than address these problems. Because we have been spending 5 to 7 percent more each year than we earn, a forced restructuring, triggered by a currency collapse, would have the same effect on wages and purchasing power that the housing collapse had on housing prices. So let's learn from our Latin and Asian friends and act before it is too late.


What about austerity?
by noteworthy at 12:30 pm EDT, Oct 29, 2008

Everyone is so excited about the PopTech talk, but no one paid any attention to his op-ed when I recommended it earlier this month.

Earlier, I wrote:

The larger question is, does this crisis demand anything more than our money? Is it just about getting Unstuck and going back to business as usual? After we give everything (again), then what?

Juan Enriquez and Jorge Dominguez wrote in the Boston Globe:

Within the billions of sentences about the financial bailout there is one word notably absent, austerity. All talk is of payments, supports, subsidies, incurring more debt, stimulus packages. The thesis seems to be: If only we spend more the party can go on. True, only if the financial meltdown is a temporary mismatch and dislocation in housing and credit markets. But suppose there is something fundamentally wrong with the US economy. Then spending more will not fix it. Getting the diagnosis right means getting the treatment right. It may save us a trillion or two.

A solution requires the country to begin to spend what it earns, reduce its mountainous debt, and address massive liabilities, restructure Social Security, pension deficits, military, and Medicare. No wonder politicians would rather spend more of your money now rather than address these problems. Because we have been spending 5 to 7 percent more each year than we earn, a forced restructuring, triggered by a currency collapse, would have the same effect on wages and purchasing power that the housing collapse had on housing prices. So let's learn from our Latin and Asian friends and act before it is too late.


 
 
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