SMRs and AMRs

Monday, February 25, 2013

And you thought American politics were a comedy ...

Austerity, Italian Style

By PAUL KRUGMAN, NYT

Two months ago, when Mario Monti stepped down as Italy’s prime minister, The Economist opined that “The coming election campaign will be, above all, a test of the maturity and realism of Italian voters.” The mature, realistic action, presumably, would have been to return Mr. Monti — who was essentially imposed on Italy by its creditors — to office, this time with an actual democratic mandate.

Well, it’s not looking good. Mr. Monti’s party appears likely to come in fourth; not only is he running well behind the essentially comical Silvio Berlusconi, he’s running behind an actual comedian, Beppe Grillo, whose lack of a coherent platform hasn’t stopped him from becoming a powerful political force.

It’s an extraordinary prospect, and one that has sparked much commentary about Italian political culture. But without trying to defend the politics of bunga bunga, let me ask the obvious question: What good, exactly, has what currently passes for mature realism done in Italy or for that matter Europe as a whole?

For Mr. Monti was, in effect, the proconsul installed by Germany to enforce fiscal austerity on an already ailing economy; willingness to pursue austerity without limit is what defines respectability in European policy circles. This would be fine if austerity policies actually worked — but they don’t. And far from seeming either mature or realistic, the advocates of austerity are sounding increasingly petulant and delusional.

(More here.)

1 Comments:

Blogger Tom Koch said...

Krugman reminds me of a person who blames the rain when his dog pees on something. Keynesians lack grown up credibility when they blame the current economic woes on austerity without one mention of the decades of overspending. Keynes prescribed cutting spending in good times; can anyone point to Krugman following along like a good disciple?

7:43 AM  

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