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Bad economic policy still biggest threat to global economic recovery THE US and European Union together make up about half of the global economy, and recovery is quite uncertain in both of these big economies. Contrary to a lot of folk wisdom and political posturing, the problem is not irresponsible government spending in either case, but a lack of commitment by the authorities in both areas to ensure a robust economic recovery from the world's deepest recession since the Great Depression. This is true in many other countries as well. The continued weakness of the
The eurozone's problems are
seen as driven by a financial crisis, and this is partly true, in the
sense that financial markets have adopted a sceptical attitude towards
the sovereign debt of But the eurozone's financial
problems can also be resolved with a robust economic recovery. Money creation In fact, both Europe and the
All this is not to ignore the
structural problems in both of these mega-economies, or the world economy
as a whole. As many economists have noted since the adoption of the
euro, there are serious problems with a common currency across countries
with large differences in productivity and no common fiscal policy.
The structural problems in the But these problems will have to be resolved in the context of a growing economy, not one with mass unemployment, deficit demagoguery, and all the associated dysfunctional politics. This is also true of the environmental transition that needs to take place if we are to avoid climate catastrophe. Half-hearted That is why it is such a pity that the richest governments and central banks in the world have only a half-hearted, vacillating commitment to economic recovery - and are actively inhibiting it in the case of the weaker eurozone economies. (They are also actively slowing recovery in the developing world: a UNICEF report in April looked at 86 IMF country reports and found that nearly 40% of the governments are planning to cut spending in 2010-2011, as compared to 2008-2009; some of these cuts are being encouraged by the IMF.) At the highest levels there
are undoubtedly economists who understand the basic national income
accounting of what is going on - hence President Obama's top economic
adviser Larry Summers' recent support for a $200 billion 'mini-stimulus'.
But the power of the financial sector, which cares little about economic
growth and often sees it as a threat to its wealth, is strong. It is
no coincidence that But there are practical policies in the world's largest economies that can restore growth and employment, and they are hardly radical. They would just take a bit of political courage that is lacking at the highest levels. Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy. This article was published on the website of the Guardian <www.guardian.co.uk>. *Third World Resurgence No. 237, May 2010, pp 19-20 |
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