Re: Krugman - Debt Reduction = Increased Spending
Thanks -- that comports pretty much with my understanding of the plan. Yet I think that has been the general plan for many decades, and the debt hasn't come down. (Even in the Clinton years which were deemed "surplus" by cash flow accounting, the debt increased because of the entitlement trust funds.) Also, the incremental GDP growth per dollar increase in debt has been dropping steadily. That's where the disconnect occurs for me -- it seems like "we'll grow our way out of debt if we get economic expansion going with fiscal stimulus" is the liberal twin of the conservative argument "we'll grow our way out of debt if we get economic expansion going by cutting tax rates". Both arguments are valid under certain circumstances, but neither is valid in all circumstances, and neither seems to apply to the actual state of our current economy. A further reason for my skepticism is that even before the recession, the GAO was saying that the projected fiscal gap was too wide to close through plausible rates of economic growth. If it wasn't possible before adding a few trillion to the tab, then it seems less possible afterwards. Do you personally find the argument that we can grow our way out of the debt incurred by deficit spending to be plausible? (You've mostly been presenting Krugman's commentary, so I was wondering where you personally stood on the issue... if you've got a strong opinion.)
Originally posted by Munger
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