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International%20Debt%20Crisis

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International Debt Crisis Part III NW Debt Crisis: United States Readings: The Morning After - Peter G. Peterson The Austerity Trap & the Growth Alternative ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: International%20Debt%20Crisis


1
International Debt Crisis Part III
2
NW Debt Crisis United States
  • Readings
  • The Morning After
  • - Peter G. Peterson
  • The Austerity Trap the Growth Alternative
  • - Jeff Faux

3
Debt Austerity in the US
  • US government, like all other governments,
    usually has outstanding debt
  • Rapid buildup of US government debt (1980s)
    occurred due to an increase in borrowing
  • Reagan tax cuts, coupled with Reagan depression,
    reduced growth of govt. taxes
  • Reagans defense buildup, coupled with failure to
    make equal cuts to social expenditures, were
    financed with borrowed money

4
Debt Austerity in the US cont.
  • Parallel growth in consumer debt despite Volcker
    attacks
  • Viewed as normal since advent of credit cards and
    consumer credit
  • Due in part to efforts to defend standard of
    living
  • Consumers faced with falling wages and rising
    unemployment

5
Peterson Argued for Austerity
  • Our national preference for consumption
    over investment the root malady
  • The wage binge of the 1970s real wages
    stagnant
  • Consumption bacchanalia
  • Blind and self-indulgent gusto

6
Peterson His Real Argument
  • Begins with an overview look at the failures of
    Reagan era supply-side economics
  • Actually extended supply-side rant
  • Differs from Reaganauts who tended to attack only
    excess consumption in the form of welfare
    cheaters and government fatcats
  • Peterson broadens attack to everyone his central
    focus on entitlements for the middle-class

7
Peterson Analysis of the Problem
  • Two main ideas both domestically
    internationally
  • Too much consumption
  • - Whether from personal income or government
    programs
  • Too little savings and investment
  • - Productivity crisis

8
Peterson Solutions to the Problem
  • Involves shifting income from consumption to
    savings and investment
  • Tame the federal budget deficit, mainly by
    cutting growth of entitlements
  • Cut growth of medical care by leaving it to
    market forces
  • Increase federal government revenue via
    consumption-based taxes value-added tax
  • Encourage investment by reducing taxes on savings
    and investment

9
Faux Argued Against Austerity
  • The Austerity Trap and the Growth Alternative
  • Fauxs article a response to Petersons extended
    rant on the necessity of austerity
  • Arguments echo those in the Third World
  • - Economists argued that the way out of the debt
    trap is not to impose austerity, but to raise
    output, consumption, and investment simultaneously

10
Fauxs Argument Against Austerity
  • Root malady is not excessive consumption, but
    insufficient production
  • Rise in consumption as a percentage of GNP was
    not due to an acceleration in consumption, but do
    to a slow down in the increase of GNP
  • Faux argued that Peterson ignored tight money and
    financial deregulation when explaining high
    interest rates that undercut investment
  • - Policies brought about by Carter, Reagan,
    Volcker

11
Faux versus Peterson
  • Faux argues that Peterson ignores
  • Runaway shops production flight
  • Casino economy diversion of money from real
    investment into financial speculation
  • Fact that entitlements actually fell as a
    percentage of government expenditures from 45.2
    to 44.1

12
Fauxs Alternative Strategy
  • Growth instead of austerity
  • Managed Growth
  • - Public-sector led investment strategy
  • Use government policy to shift resources from
    wasteful speculation to real investment
  • Expand government investment in social
    infrastructure growth, new trade policy dealing
    with access to markets, new social contract
    between labor and capital
  • Global Keynesianism
  • - Growth for the world to induce investment
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