Posts Tagged ‘Krugman the Joker’

Krugman Pulls a Boner

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

boner

‘A month ago Mr Krugman and I sat on a panel convened in New York to discuss the financial crisis. I made the point that “the running of massive fiscal deficits in excess of 12 per cent of gross domestic product this year, and the issuance therefore of vast quantities of freshly-minted bonds” was likely to push long-term interest rates up, at a time when the Federal Reserve aims at keeping them down. I predicted a “painful tug-of-war between our monetary policy and our fiscal policy, as the markets realise just what a vast quantity of bonds are going to have to be absorbed by the financial system this year”.

‘De haut en bas came the patronising response: I belonged to a “Dark Age” of economics. It was “really sad” that my knowledge of the dismal science had not even got up to 1937 (the year after Keynes’s General Theory was published), much less its zenith in 2005 (the year Mr Krugman’s macro-economics textbook appeared). Did I not grasp that the key to the crisis was “a vast excess of desired savings over willing investment”? “We have a global savings glut,” explained Mr Krugman, “which is why there is, in fact, no upward pressure on interest rates.”’

Niall Ferguson

A World of His Own

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Paul “Busta Rhymes” Krugman phones it in from Abu Dhabi: No Threat of Inflation. If you’re only looking at stability in the price of washing machines, there is no inflation. If you’re looking at food, fuel, electricity like most of us, there is inflation. If you’re looking at a sinking dollar not being able to purchase raw materials or oil there is and will be inflation. Krugman treats the American economy as a closed system (we owe the money to ourselves, creating money is irrelevant) when it supports what he wants to say, or as an open system (de-peg from the dollar) when that supports what he wants to say.

Why Krugman Doesn’t Advise Obama

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Here’s another fine bit demonstrating why Obama doesn’t have Krugman as an advisor:

Last week Bill Gross of Pimco, the giant bond fund, warned that the U.S. government may lose its AAA debt rating in a few years, thanks to the trillions it’s spending to rescue the economy and the banks. Is that a real possibility?

Well, in a rational world Mr. Gross’s warning would make no sense. America’s projected deficits may sound large, yet it would take only a modest tax increase to cover the expected rise in interest payments — and right now American taxes are well below those in most other wealthy countries. The fiscal consequences of the current crisis, in other words, should be manageable. – The New York Times

As you can see, Krugman lives in some imaginary world. In the real world, our trillion dollar deficits are leading us to the point where our national debt will EQUAL our GDP, which on its own would be reason to downgrade our debt rating from AAA. This on its own is bad, but the way we finance that debt is worse.

You might think at the current rates treasuries are offered at that there’s no harm in deficit spending. Here are a couple of things to think about. First, most of the debt is due in the short term. Next year when an x-year treausury matures we have to pay it off, and we pay it off by auctioning off more treasuries at whatever rate the market will bear. Simply put, we have an Adjustable Rate National Debt. Second, we won’t be able to sell treasuries as easily. This fall two things happened that allowed us to finance our deficit spending that aren’t likely to occur again. When Lehman collapsed in September and Reserve Primary Fund broke the buck, there was a flight from money market funds to treasuries. The other reason we were able to finance the national debt was the Chinese and other foreign entities, who had a total of $1.3 trillion in Fannie and Freddie debt/”assets”, were drawing down those holdings and transferring them into treasuries.

Add to this the fact that we’re devaluing our currency and you’d be scratching your head as to why we would have a AAA rating in a “rational world”. In March, Dollar Bill Bernanke created over A TRILLION DOLLARS out of thin air to buy $300 billion in U.S. debt* and $750 billion in mortgage securities – and he’s given strong indications that he’s ready to print more money. This is roughly equivalent to stock dilution – so China and Japan have their trillions in U.S. Treasuries but we’ve effectively made them worth less. In effect, we are welshing on our debts, even if we pay them. And the Chinese and every other nation but America knows and admits that.

I’m sure that Krugman is scratching his head as to why reality differs from his theories about massive deficit spending with only positive or no consequences, but that’s exactly the point, and precisely why I’m glad that Obama may invite him to dinner but not let him anywhere near the kitchen.

* Ostensibly to lower interest rates but in reality because the market for treasuries has dried up. Reference Reserve Primary Fund and China’s treasury transfer above.