Getting Economic Policy Exactly Wrong
I’ve blogged on the writings of Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz before (here and here). He writes with such a simple elegance and so precisely diagnoses the current economic problem that it is worth doing so over and over again.
I was among those who hoped that, somehow, the financial crisis would teach Americans (and others) a lesson about the need for greater equality, stronger regulation, and a better balance between the market and government. Alas, that has not been the case. On the contrary, a resurgence of right-wing economics, driven, as always, by ideology and special interests, once again threatens the global economy – or at least the economies of Europe and America, where these ideas continue to flourish.
And the result:
Do we really need another costly experiment with ideas that have failed repeatedly? We shouldn’t, but increasingly it appears that we will have to endure another one nonetheless. A failure of either Europe or the US to return to robust growth would be bad for the global economy. A failure in both would be disastrous – even if the major emerging-market countries have attained self-sustaining growth. Unfortunately, unless wiser heads prevail, that is the way the world is heading.
We can’t say we haven’t been warned. By Stiglitz or by recent history.
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