And that’s a tale that needs telling. For the past two years, the Greek
story has, as one
recent paper on economic policy put it, been “interpreted as a
parable of the risks of fiscal profligacy.” Not a day goes by without
some politician or pundit intoning, with the air of a man conveying
great wisdom, that we must slash government spending right away or find
ourselves turning into Greece, Greece I tell you.
Just to take one recent example, when Mitch Daniels, the governor of
Indiana, delivered the Republican reply to the State of the Union
address, he insisted that “we’re only a short distance behind Greece,
Spain and other European countries now facing economic catastrophe.” By
the way, apparently nobody told him that Spain had low government debt
and a budget surplus on the eve of the crisis; it’s in trouble thanks to
private-sector, not public-sector, excess.
But what Greek experience actually shows is that while running deficits
in good times can get you in trouble — which is indeed the story for
Greece, although not for Spain — trying to eliminate deficits once
you’re already in trouble is a recipe for depression.
These days, austerity-induced depressions are visible all around
Europe’s periphery. Greece is the worst case, with unemployment soaring
to 20 percent even as public services, including health care, collapse.
But Ireland, which has done everything the austerity crowd wanted, is in
terrible shape too, with unemployment near 15 percent and real G.D.P.
down by double digits. Portugal and Spain are in similarly dire straits.
And austerity in a slump doesn’t just inflict vast suffering. There is
growing evidence that it is self-defeating even in purely fiscal terms,
as the combination of falling revenues due to a depressed economy and
worsened long-term prospects actually reduces market confidence and
makes the future debt burden harder to handle. You have to wonder how
countries that are systematically denying a future to their young people
— youth unemployment in Ireland, which used to be lower than in the
United States, is now almost 30 percent, while it’s near 50 percent in
Greece — are supposed to achieve enough growth to service their debt.
This was not what was supposed to happen. Two years ago, as many policy
makers and pundits began calling for a pivot from stimulus to austerity,
they promised big gains in return for the pain. “The idea that
austerity measures could trigger stagnation is incorrect,” Jean-Claude
Trichet, then the president of the European Central Bank, declared in
June 2010. Instead, he insisted, fiscal discipline would inspire
confidence, and this would lead to economic growth.
And every slight uptick in an austerity economy has been hailed as proof
that the policy works. Irish austerity has been proclaimed a success
story not once but twice, first in the summer of 2010, then again last
fall; each time the supposed good news quickly evaporated.
You may ask what alternative countries like Greece and Ireland had, and
the answer is that they had and have no good alternatives short of
leaving the euro, an extreme step that, realistically, their leaders
cannot take until all other options have failed — a state of affairs
that, if you ask me, Greece is rapidly approaching.
Germany and the European Central Bank could take action to make that
extreme step less necessary, both by demanding less austerity and doing
more to boost the European economy as a whole. But the main point is
that America does have an alternative: we have our own currency, and we
can borrow long-term at historically low interest rates, so we don’t
need to enter a downward spiral of austerity and economic contraction.
So it is time to stop invoking Greece as a cautionary tale about the
dangers of deficits; from an American point of view, Greece should
instead be seen as a cautionary tale about the dangers of trying to
reduce deficits too quickly, while the economy is still deeply
depressed. (And yes, despite some better news lately, our economy is
still deeply depressed.)
The truth is that if you want to know who is really trying to turn
America into Greece, it’s not those urging more stimulus for our
still-depressed economy; it’s the people demanding that we emulate
Greek-style austerity even though we don’t face Greek-style borrowing
constraints, and thereby plunge ourselves into a Greek-style depression.
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