The People Who Could Not See an $8 Trillion Housing Bubble Warn of Public Debt LevelsDecember 12, 2009
The Post, which published zero news articles anywhere warning of the collapse of the housing bubble, published
yet another front page piece warning about budget deficit problems, this time in Greece. This one most expressed the concerns of unnamed "analysts," (people who didn't know enough about the economy to see an $8 trillion housing bubble). The piece does include an explicit reference to Moody's, the bond-rating agency best known for giving investment grade rating to near worthless collaterized debt obligations.
The point of this article is that the Washington Post wants to cut Social Security and Medicare and it will use its news pages to shamelessly push this agenda.
--Dean Baker
http://www.prospect.org/csnc/blogs/beat_the_press David Brooks pops up with some nastiness in the comments section. Could be he's smarting from this earlier item from Baker down the page (Dec 8).
David Brooks Flunks Economics, Again
Dean Baker on December 8, 2009
David Brooks tells readers that: "The U.S. has its problems, but Americans would be crazy to trade their problems with those of any other large nation." The basis for this assertion is that it enjoyed considerably faster GDP growth since 1991 than the other major wealthy countries between 1991 and 2009.
There are three main problems in Brooks' analysis. First, the U.S. was in the middle of a recession in 1991. While hucksters often take measures of growth from the middle of recession, serious people do not. The appropriate comparison year is 1989, the peak of the prior business cycle. This erases some of the gap in growth over this period.
However the more important error is that Brooks uses overall growth, rather than per capita growth. Countries do not get richer unless their economy grows more than their population. Most of the difference in growth rate between the U.S. and France and Germany is due to differences in population growth. The U.S. is getting more crowded. Germany and Japan are getting less crowded.
(snip- see link)
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For those who care about the future of the planet, we may also consider the fact that greenhouse gas emissions in these other countries have not risen anywhere near as rapidly as in the U.S., and we have even further grounds to question the superiority of the U.S. model.
Also, the U.S. growth was accompanied by an unsustainable trade deficit. Okay, we're getting way over Brooks' head here, so I better stop.
http://www.prospect.org/csnc/blogs/beat_the_press_archive?month=12&year=2009&base_name=david_brooks_flunks_economics