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Mises Economics Blog

William Anderson Archive

An Unsustainable Path of Debt Expansion

October 21, 2009 6:18 AM by William Anderson

Once (hyper)inflation is publicly seen as being the lesser evil of all options available for the government meeting its debt service, it cannot be dismissed out of hand that (hyper)inflation would be the consequence. FULL ARTICLE

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Krugman Touts Austrian Theory! (Sort of)

July 17, 2009 6:22 AM by William Anderson

Paul Krugman, who tells us that assets and capital are homogeneous when it comes to economic policy, suddenly claims that there were malinvestments during the boom! (Actually, he does not use the M-word, as he would not know what it means, but I digress.)

The Great One writes:

Financial firms, we now know, directed vast quantities of capital into the construction of unsellable houses and empty shopping malls. They increased risk rather than reducing it, and concentrated risk rather than spreading it. In effect, the industry was selling dangerous patent medicine to gullible consumers.

His next quote is true, but then his analysis (as always) goes south:

And Wall Streeters have every incentive to keep playing that kind of game.

I always am glad when "elite" economists "discover" moral hazard, but, unfortunately they assume that the banking and financial system MUST be cartelized (regulated, actually, but the meaning is the same) and then regulated. In one breath, Krugman seems to understand the dangers of the federal financial "put":

I won't try to parse the competing claims about how much direct benefit Goldman received from recent financial bailouts, especially the government's assumption of A.I.G.'s liabilities. What's clear is that Wall Street in general, Goldman very much included, benefited hugely from the government's provision of a financial backstop -- an assurance that it will rescue major financial players whenever things go wrong.

However, before one thinks that Krugman has converted to the Austrian way of thinking, he adds this:

You can argue that such rescues are necessary if we're to avoid a replay of the Great Depression. In fact, I agree. But the result is that the financial system's liabilities are now backed by an implicit government guarantee.

Now the last time there was a comparable expansion of the financial safety net, the creation of federal deposit insurance in the 1930s, it was accompanied by much tighter regulation, to ensure that banks didn't abuse their privileges. This time, new regulations are still in the drawing-board stage -- and the finance lobby is already fighting against even the most basic protections for consumers.

Thus, in Krugman's ideal world, the system would be both cartelized and regulated, with the government guarantees of rescue behind it. It never seems to occur to Krugman that maybe, just maybe, we would not see these huge malinvestments and reckless behavior if we had free-market finance.

The reason is simple. Krugman has no understanding at all of a system of profits and LOSSES. To him, it all is about the Keynesian "animal spirits" and nothing else. Yeah, real economic analysis.

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Krugman's Folly: Deficits have "saved the world"

July 15, 2009 3:02 PM by William Anderson

Never let it be said that Paul Krugman does not have a sense of humor. Granted, it might be unintentional, but I think all of us can get a good laugh out of his latest blog post entitled: "Deficits saved the world." According to the Great One, who is responding to a Goldman Sachs analyst:

...government deficits, mainly the result of automatic stabilizers rather than discretionary policy, are the only thing that has saved us from a second Great Depression.

He then goes on to give a Keynesian Cross explanation of this nonsense. I had this today on the FEE webpage to help explain just how crude the Keynesian theory really is. Seeing Krugman's recent blog, I certainly have not changed my mind on the ridiculousness of Keynesianism-Krugmanism.

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"Professional" Economists also are clueless
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Krugman Still is a Broken Clock
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The "Mature Economy" Argument -- Again
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Sad News
2009.03.07 | Comments (6)

Save us from the "animal spirits" crowd!
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Clueless on Deflation -- Again
2009.01.18 | Comments (24)

Paul Krugman and Okun's "Law"
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One Cheer for Paul Krugman, or Why the Bubble Economy?
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More Keynesian "Nobel" Nonsense
2008.10.31 | Comments (15)

Keynes, Krugman, and Capitulation
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On Krugman and his prize
2008.10.13 | Comments (30)

Feldstein's Foolishness
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The Magic Printing Press
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Fires of the Feds: How the Government Has Destroyed Forests
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Roads, Bridges, and Socialist Capital
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The Anti-Energy Congress
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Wage Gaps, Inequality, and Government
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J.K. Galbraith Dies
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Republicans Target "Economic Crimes"
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Target: Google
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Shortages in Hawaii
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Backdoor Price Controls
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Katrina and the Never-Ending Scandal of State Management
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Target: Private Enterprise
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Paul Krugman's Gotcha Moment
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Is Austrian Economics Merely Religion?
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A Whiff of Stupidity
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The Economics of the End of Life
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The Violence of Unionism
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Federal Criminal Law: Expediency Over Principle
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'Conflicting Rights' and the Hoppe Affair
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If You Are So Smart...
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How Should We Teach Economics?
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Paid Enough to Buy the Product
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The Genius and Struggle of PayPal
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Why Business Cycle Theory Matters
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Is Ken Lay A Criminal?
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The Hoax of the Food Desert
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The Economics of Water in the West
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Does Wal-Mart Destroy Communities?
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Profits Do Not Cause High Prices
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The Quattrone Conviction
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The Economics of Outsourcing
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Ashcroft and Economic Crimes
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OPEC: Don't Blaim Us
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A Rite of Spring
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Wealth as a Crime
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