|
He used to think so too. So while Krugman is sanguine about defecits today, he wasn't always. Guess when he wrote the following for the NYTimes? If he was scared stiff then with ten-year defecits projected to be 1.8 trillion dollars and 4% of GDP, why is he not peeing down his leg now? Maybe he is one of the wishful-thinking economists who tell their readers "this time it's different"?
Here is an exerpt from some vintage Krugman .....
A Fiscal Train Wreck By PAUL KRUGMAN
... it's time to be prepared. So last week I switched to a fixed-rate mortgage. It means higher monthly payments, but I'm terrified about what will happen to interest rates once financial markets wake up to the implications of skyrocketing budget deficits.
So what? ... we're looking at a fiscal crisis that will drive interest rates sky-high.
A leading economist recently summed up one reason why: "When the government reduces saving by running a budget deficit, the interest rate rises."
But what's really scary ? what makes a fixed-rate mortgage seem like such a good idea ? is the looming threat to the federal government's solvency.
That may sound alarmist: right now the deficit, while huge in absolute terms, is only 2 ? make that 3, O.K., maybe 4 ? percent of G.D.P. But that misses the point. "Think of the federal government as a gigantic insurance company (with a sideline business in national defense and homeland security), which does its accounting on a cash basis, only counting premiums and payouts as they go in and out the door. An insurance company with cash accounting . . . is an accident waiting to happen." So says the Treasury under secretary; his point is that because of the future liabilities of Social Security and Medicare, the true budget picture is much worse than the conventional deficit numbers suggest.
How will the train wreck play itself out? ... my prediction is that politicians will eventually be tempted to resolve the crisis the way irresponsible governments usually do: by printing money, both to pay current bills and to inflate away debt.
And as that temptation becomes obvious, interest rates will soar. It won't happen right away. With the economy stalling and the stock market plunging, short-term rates are probably headed down, not up, in the next few months, and mortgage rates may not have hit bottom yet. But unless we slide into Japanese-style deflation, there are much higher interest rates in our future.
|