Flaylo
Handsome Devil
Robert Reich: A Question of Timing: What America Can Learn From the Revolt in Europe
This is why the GOP's "just cut spending and social programs" will bite them in their own ass and make the country and its people far worse.
Who's an economy for? Voters in France and Greece have made it clear it's not for the bond traders.
Referring to his own electoral woes, Prime Minister David Cameron wrote Monday in an article in the conservative Daily Telegraph: "When people think about the economy they don't see it through the dry numbers of the deficit figures, trade balances or inflation forecasts -- but instead the things that make the difference between a life that's worth living and a daily grind that drags them down."
Cameron, whose own economic policies have worsened the daily grind dragging down most Brits, may be sobered by what happened over the weekend in France and Greece -- as well as his own poll numbers. Britain's conservatives have been taking a beating.
In truth, the choice isn't simply between budget-cutting austerity, on the one hand, and growth and jobs on the other.
It's really a question of timing. And it's the same issue on this side of the pond. If government slices spending too early, when unemployment is high and growth is slowing, it makes the debt situation far worse.
That's because public spending is a critical component of total demand. If demand is already lagging, spending cuts further slow the economy -- and thereby increase the size of the public debt relative to the size of the overall economy.
You end up with the worst of both worlds -- a growing ratio of debt to the gross domestic product, coupled with high unemployment and a public that's furious about losing safety nets when they're most needed.
This is why the GOP's "just cut spending and social programs" will bite them in their own ass and make the country and its people far worse.