Paul Krugman, the Keynesian drum-beating economist, was invited by CNN on Sunday to promote the Obama strategy of pumping additional billions into the economy. One of his very telling responses to Fareed Zakaria’s question on significantly more spending and borrowing was “what about now?”
This very self serving response from Krugman was an advocacy of profligate spending very much in keeping with a too popular expectation of immediate gratification. Pushing the debt onto future generations, and “get-me-what-I-want-now,” is the egocentric inclination that delivered the current state of financial devastation. “What about now?” came from the mind of an economist who exudes a distinct arrogance much too indistinguishable from that personified in Obama.
The defiant arrogance, evident in both of these currently influential individuals, is a disconcerting heap of hubris that America’s present and future conscience must reject out of hand. Another prognosticating ego on the talking-head circuit is Nouriel Roubini, the self-proclaimed forecaster of doom, who improves his personal bank account by knocking capitalism and calling for more government intervention. Current and future taxpayers cannot afford to accommodate such egocentric thinking, from egocentric minds. When overwhelming egos audaciously preach anything, we should become very suspicious of the direction they profess to lead.
I am making a statement less on economic theory, than I am making an observation on the message our intuitive natures are very likely receiving, many of us at least – the Obama and Krugman recipe for a utopian Now is false. It is false for the Now, and it is false for the Future. We should be apprehensive and skeptical of all egocentric thinking. We should very much distrust assertions, articulate or otherwise, that emanate from well-understood egotism.
Weary taxpayers should demand leadership that does not ignore the burdens of tax increases, massive stimulus spending, and out-of-control deficit spending. They should also demand of the Krugmans of the world, why they have no solutions to the impossible debt load that will be confronting America in 10 to 12 years. Taxpayers are standing on the sidelines of a progressive parade sweeping the country with an ideology that is expanding government to redistribute wealth rather than enacting measures to stimulate its creation.
Crossposted from The Pacific Gate Post
A constituent of the vast baby boomer generation with a career which has been fortunate to know the ponderous corporate worlds, as well as the intimately pressurized, and invigorating entrepreneurial domains of high tech and venture capital, I have harvested my share of mistakes meandering through corridors of enterprise from Silicon Valley, to London and endless, colourful, sometimes praetorian points in between. The voyage has provided an abundance of fodder for a pen yielding to an inquisitive keyboard, a foraging mind, and a passionate spirit.
Whether political or business or social or economic or personal, is it not all political? It is a privilege to write, and an even greater privilege to be read by anyone, and sometimes with the wind at my back the writing may occasionally be legible. I do not write to invite scorn, nor to invite respect, but if I get really lucky the writing can stimulate thinking. I also write for the very selfish purpose of animating my own processes, and engaging the best of what life offers. Above all, whether biting fire or swatting shadows, I am grateful to be gifted the freedom to write and publish whatever flows down to the keyboard. To all those who enabled this freedom, and to all those standing guard to preserve it, I am indebted.
keynesian economics is based on the idea that TANSTAAFL (there aint no such thing as a free lunch) does not exist.
But that is what happens, when you use improper metrics to measure success. The GDP measures the transfer of money, NOT the creation of goods, or wealth… so you get “plans” and theories which support moving money, not wealth creation.
Its like if the Refs decided that the team which ran the most offensive plays, not the team who gets the highest score was the winner…
@ Romeo13,
“keynesian economics is based on the idea that TANSTAAFL (there aint no such thing as a free lunch) does not exist.”
. . . You’re absolutely right. Common sense dictates that what is being promoted by the W.H. and Congress is self serving, but destructive for the country’s long term health.
You’ll notice that the government led program of drowning more taxpayers in the “debt” pool continues to gain momentum with 30-Year Mortgage interest rates being dropped to a record 4.57%. . . . “Ye shall go forth and borrow MORE. Ye shall buy homes you can’t afford and ye shall borrow to stimulate the economy.”
. . . The geniuses are in charge.