From 2009 to 2012, the US federal deficit shrank from 10.1% of GDP to
7% of GDP. That’s the fastest deficit reduction we’ve seen in six
decades—and all before the fiscal cliff has kicked in. Here’s the chart from Jed Graham:
Put this alongside a record-setting contraction
of government employment and a 7.9 percent unemployment rate, and what
you have is a portrait of fiscal irresponsibility. A lot of this
deficit reduction has to do with the fact that the economy is now
growing (albeit feebly), instead of contracting, but looking at this
chart should also reinforce how dangerous and unnecessary it is that
we’ve decided to create an austerity crisis at this moment. (This
“austerity crisis,” by the way, should really be understood to include
both the possibility of going over, and staying over, the fiscal cliff
AND the possibility of the cliff being replaced by a “grand bargain” on
deficit reduction.) The last time the deficit was reduced at a faster
rate was in 1937, when the government embraced a hard pivot to austerity
and the economy tumbled back into recession.
Read more: http://www.multiplier-effect.org/?p=6464
No comments:
Post a Comment