The Fiscal Stimulus Will Pay For Itself
Rachel Maddow gets it. Economists and Republicans don't.
I watched Prof. Jeffrey Sachs on Rachel Maddow's show the other day. She asked whether the fiscal stimulus would work. "No" he said emphatically, it would not. "No one has the tools....to fix this......the fiscal hole will cripple us for the long-term."
She tentatively mentioned 'the multiplier.' He brushed this aside with a counsel of despair. "We might have a few more jobs in the short-term but a massive deficit in the long-term..."
Scant consolation for 13 million unemployed and underemployed Americans. Their lives could be transformed by this fiscal stimulus.
And anyway, as Keynes once noted, in the long term we're all dead.
Sachs's analysis is overwhelmingly shared by mainstream economists. And by Republicans. These have been whipping voters into a frenzy with talk of 'generational theft.' Future generations, they argue, will be paying for this fiscal stimulus for decades to come. That is simply not true, as I will show below.
Meantime, these points are truly rich coming from the Republicans. Readers no doubt know that during the Bush-Cheney years the US national debt doubled from $5,700bn in 2001 to $10,700bn today. Others may recollect that Mr. Cheney said in 2001: "Reagan proved that deficits don't matter."
So let's not hear any more from Republicans about deficits mattering or about 'generational theft.'
But to get back to history. The fiscal stimulus of the 1930's was positive -- both in the US and the UK. It dramatically lowered unemployment after 1933.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ann-pettifor/the-fiscal-stimulus-will_b_167119.html