Who Really Got Us Into This Mess?
Credit: Vaughan
The argument goes that banks and supranational organizations such as the EU were merely trying to give the people what they wanted - bounteous supplies of cheap credit. If this caused the whole money-making machine to blow a gasket, then it had nothing to do with the factory bosses and the owners; it was the fault of those feckless individual borrowers who had been driving it too hard, who had been reckless enough to keep demanding more credit.
So in the US the authors of the crisis were “trailer trash” while in Europe it was voters who kept voting in fiscally-irresponsible governments.
The Nobel prize-winning economist Paul Krugman has written a New York Times column that does a great job of puncturing such nonsense. Krugman wrote,
According to Krugman, the reality is that the crisis - of which we’re entering phase two with the intensification of the eurozone crisis - was a “top-down disaster”. He said that in seeking to scapegoat the general public, the "elites" are “ducking some much-needed reflection on their own catastrophic mistakes.”
Krugman argues that, in the US, the policies that gave rise to massive deficits had nothing to do with ordinary folk but bear the imprimatur of President George W Bush and his neo-conservative administration. The policies included massive tax cuts for the wealthy; overseas military adventures in Afghanistan and Iraq; and accelerated financial deregulation that gave rise to a "runaway financial sector".
The latter move, which led to the crisis, which in turn triggered the "Great Depression", have yet to be fully quantified. Krugman singled out former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan for special oppobrium:
Krugman concluded by demolishing the view that European citizens - Greek tax dodgers say - are responsible for the eurozone's current parlous state. He said the real problem was that the European elite constructed a single currency on flawed foundations and without properly thinking it through. "The drive for a single European currency was the ultimate top-down project, an elite vision imposed on highly reluctant voters.
Krugman is appalled at the hypocrisy of elites who try and blame the voters for their own failures, and then seek to "hector" about the need for deficit reduction etc.
This provocative article has not gone down well in all quarters. Robert Teitelman launched into an attack in The Deal, accusing Krugman of having been watching too much Fox Television. Teitelman added: