An Irresponsible Austerity Narrative Endures
Wednesday, 29 May 2013 09:40By Paul Krugman, Krugman & Co. | Op-EdWe sort of knew this was happening — that, for example, a lot of the apparent rise in productivity was just a shift to pharmaceutical companies that add little to the Irish economy. But a new report from the Economic and Social Research Institute suggests that the problem is bigger than realized.
This passage in the Financial Times article got me: "The E.S.R.I. research raises question marks over the strength of Ireland's recovery, which has surprised many foreign observers in light of the severe economic crisis the country experienced in 2008." Who are these surprised foreign observers? My impression is that Ireland has been proclaimed a success story again and again and again, only to have the narrative slink away in the face of disappointing experience.
And if we look at the jobs numbers, which are not subject to these accounting issues, we can see what the "strength of Ireland's recovery" looks like — check out the chart.
I guess we can check the record here and see just how prescient the B.I.S. was. What I do recall, however — which the Journal apparently doesn't — is that the B.I.S. has spent years warning about the dangers of low interest rates. Except that a couple of years back it was telling a completely different story about why we needed to raise rates; you see, the big danger was imminent inflation.
According to a Bloomberg article from June 27, 2011: " 'Global inflation pressures are rising rapidly as commodity prices soar and as the global recovery runs into capacity constraints,' said the B.I.S., which acts as a central bank for the world's central banks. 'These increased upside risks to inflation call for higher policy rates.' "
In fact, inflation is running below target just about everywhere. You might therefore think that the B.I.S. would step back a bit and reconsider both its policy recommendations and the framework it uses to derive those recommendations. But no. Higher interest rates are always the solution; it's only the problem they're supposed to solve that changes.
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