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Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity

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  • Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity

    Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity

    In a new short video, Mark Blyth breaks down the “nonsense” of fiscal austerity, now all the rage in governments across the globe. Austerity, while claiming to be virtuous, really “involves a question of equity: who pays and who doesn’t,” Blyth explains. “Like a unicorn with a magic bag of salt, it’s a nice idea,” he says, but in reality it’s baloney. Here’s why:

    Before the crisis, everyone took on debt. Those at the bottom 40% of income distribution took it on to pay the bills, because after all they hadn’t seen a real wage increase since 1979, Blyth points out. The banks, on the other hand, levered up, which is like “going double or nothing in blackjack,” he says. They pushed in all those blackjack chips — but each was just an IOU, and when the whole thing crashed they became Too Big To Fail.

    So the problem is debt, but not the way fiscal conservatives want you to think. Everyone, from corporate treasurers to single moms, will use any cash they have to pay down debt — not to spend. So public consumption — i.e. government spending — takes the place of private consumption. “All of these pieces are connected,” Blyth says. “If the public sector cleans its balance sheet at the same time as the private sector, then the whole economy craters.”

    “Austerity: the pain after the party,” Blyth mimics. “But here’s the kicker: the hangover of austerity is not going to be felt the same across income distribution.” In fact, a cycle perpetuates wherein those with the lowest income keep bearing the brunt for those with the highest.

  • #2
    Re: Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity

    Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
    Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity

    In a new short video, Mark Blyth breaks down the “nonsense” of fiscal austerity, now all the rage in governments across the globe. Austerity, while claiming to be virtuous, really “involves a question of equity: who pays and who doesn’t,” Blyth explains. “Like a unicorn with a magic bag of salt, it’s a nice idea,” he says, but in reality it’s baloney. Here’s why:

    Before the crisis, everyone took on debt. Those at the bottom 40% of income distribution took it on to pay the bills, because after all they hadn’t seen a real wage increase since 1979, Blyth points out. The banks, on the other hand, levered up, which is like “going double or nothing in blackjack,” he says. They pushed in all those blackjack chips — but each was just an IOU, and when the whole thing crashed they became Too Big To Fail.

    So the problem is debt, but not the way fiscal conservatives want you to think. Everyone, from corporate treasurers to single moms, will use any cash they have to pay down debt — not to spend. So public consumption — i.e. government spending — takes the place of private consumption. “All of these pieces are connected,” Blyth says. “If the public sector cleans its balance sheet at the same time as the private sector, then the whole economy craters.”

    “Austerity: the pain after the party,” Blyth mimics. “But here’s the kicker: the hangover of austerity is not going to be felt the same across income distribution.” In fact, a cycle perpetuates wherein those with the lowest income keep bearing the brunt for those with the highest.

    In the video he assumes that the crisis was the fault for the massive increase in debt(10-16sec.), on contrary this problem is a 30-40 year problem of fire expansion, not forgetting to mention the people who VOTED in the politicians who then ransacked the treasury.


    Whats really scary is that if the government stops spending, the economy craters, this nonsensical structure has been proposed by the elites and voted in by the people in a democracy. The idea that one entity can crater the economy is scary, and is the real mark of an unhealthy economy, where the majority of situations such as corruption, inflation, income inequality, debt usury, poverty stems from.


    In fact I like the solution of total collapse for everyone, its the chance to get rid of FIRE.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity - another Overpaid College Prof

      He's another well educated idiot and showman.

      So, instead of Austerity Governments should expand their debt or raise Taxes.

      Expanding debt and Government sector spending will fuel Inflation even more. Raise Taxes - the truly wealthy will manage their Income and seek out investments that are Non-Taxable. For Example, Senator John Kerry Wife Theresa Hinz Kerry earns millions of dollars a year through Tax free Munis

      Education Industry was a major beneficiary of the FIRE economy. The Big mouth Professor types always act as though they were completely out side the system - the Pay scale of professors, the massive expansion of University physical plant, and the outrageous level of Tuition and fees is all a result of FIRE - a solution is Not going to come people who were key beneficiaries.

      Austerity is the only way out......and it will be very painful.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity - another Overpaid College Prof

        Originally posted by BK View Post
        He's another well educated idiot and showman.

        So, instead of Austerity Governments should expand their debt or raise Taxes.

        Expanding debt and Government sector spending will fuel Inflation even more. Raise Taxes - the truly wealthy will manage their Income and seek out investments that are Non-Taxable. For Example, Senator John Kerry Wife Theresa Hinz Kerry earns millions of dollars a year through Tax free Munis

        Education Industry was a major beneficiary of the FIRE economy. The Big mouth Professor types always act as though they were completely out side the system - the Pay scale of professors, the massive expansion of University physical plant, and the outrageous level of Tuition and fees is all a result of FIRE - a solution is Not going to come people who were key beneficiaries.

        Austerity is the only way out......and it will be very painful.

        No, they should default and start over. Austerity is endless debt peonage.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity - another Overpaid College Prof

          Originally posted by Chomsky View Post
          No, they should default and start over. Austerity is endless debt peonage.
          A "default bubble" in the making?

          It's looking more and more like the quicker you default, the better off you will be; by the time the late adopters begin defaulting (they start to panic as they see everyone around them is defaulting w/o penalty and are afraid they are getting behind by paying their debts), the defaults overwhelm the legal/processing system, Obama passes an executive order prohibiting defaults while suspending debt service payments the fed steps in an guarantees every promissory note in existence... and only those most responsible and who view default as an unethical decision (poor foolish suckers) are stuck with their debts ... and then ... POOM

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Visualizing the Nonsense of Fiscal Austerity - another Overpaid College Prof

            Originally posted by BK View Post
            He's another well educated idiot and showman.

            So, instead of Austerity Governments should expand their debt or raise Taxes.

            Expanding debt and Government sector spending will fuel Inflation even more. Raise Taxes - the truly wealthy will manage their Income and seek out investments that are Non-Taxable. For Example, Senator John Kerry Wife Theresa Hinz Kerry earns millions of dollars a year through Tax free Munis

            Education Industry was a major beneficiary of the FIRE economy. The Big mouth Professor types always act as though they were completely out side the system - the Pay scale of professors, the massive expansion of University physical plant, and the outrageous level of Tuition and fees is all a result of FIRE - a solution is Not going to come people who were key beneficiaries.

            Austerity is the only way out......and it will be very painful.
            A debt cut is the only way out, and it will be painful for banks.


            Ed.

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