|
|
|
|
|
by JanezStupar
5745 days ago
|
|
Maybe It's because English is not my native language... But I fail to see how Krugman in this article said that policy-makers should go out and create a 2007 recession or put mildly - that he advocated the policy that happened round that time and resulted in following years. To me it seems more like he is describing the mechanics of situation, eg: If you want the car to go faster - step on the right pedal. This sentence doesn't imply that going faster is actually good or desired. Also as little as I have read Krugman - he (to me at least) came across as very on-point about the issues. I nowhere see the "Hawk" that everyone tries to paint. This is why I'm going on a "read all Krugman's columns since 2000" one of these days - since I really want to understand flaw not in his but in my logic - since I fail to see Krugman as someone who cheered the disaster we are in. |
|
In this article, Krugman says that consumers need to spend more and that a housing bubble is one way to increase consumer spending. Perhaps he was not advocating a housing bubble, but he clearly didn't see a housing bubble as the terrible thing that it turned out to be. If he thought the policy was bad, he wouldn't have offered it as a solution.