The Passionate Politics of Paul Krugman’s Apolitical Economics

by Will Wilkinson on February 6, 2009

Like the president, Krugman seems firmly caught in the paradox of countercyclical macroeconomic politics. The intermediate-level textbook theory says that at times like these we need a certain kind of policy to steady the economy’s nerves and lubricate consumption and investment. The economics says we need confidence. But political reality says we need panic. So we try to induce panic so that we can later induce confidence. This seems an extremely awkward and implausible approach, but that doesn’t keep anyone from trying it. 

The deeper problem, I think, is that the textbook theory doesn’t have any politics in it. In macroeconomics textbooks, government is a benevolent central planner beyond politics. It is assumed, for simplicity’s sake, that governments can act in perfect compliance with theory. It is also assumed that theory is settled before coming to a policy problem, that motivated disagreement over theory is not an essential element of democratic policymaking. But of course, there is politics, which trashes hope of either consensus on or compliance with theory. And that’s how we ended up with the legislative monstrosity actually under consideration in Congress. As Harvard’s Robert Barro puts it:

This is probably the worst bill that has been put forward since the 1930s. I don’t know what to say. I mean it’s wasting a tremendous amount of money. It has some simplistic theory that I don’t think will work, so I don’t think the expenditure stuff is going to have the intended effect. I don’t think it will expand the economy. And the tax cutting isn’t really geared toward incentives. It’s not really geared to lowering tax rates; it’s more along the lines of throwing money at people. On both sides I think it’s garbage. So in terms of balance between the two it doesn’t really matter that much.

The economists can duke it out over the possibility of successful fiscal stimulus. But is there any reason based in up-to-date economic theory to believe that this trillion dollar deficit-spending bill is not, as Barro says, garbage?

Krugman is plumping for it anyway. Hard. So what can one say about Krugman? That he is a creature of extraordinary double consciousness. Perhaps more than any economist of his caliber, Krugman understands that policy is largely determined by the outcome of the public opinion shoutfest. Yet this recognition seems to have no effect on Krugman’s ideas. Rather than bring inside his models disagreement over economic theory and the lack of political incentive to faithfully apply them, which would lead him to radically revise his prescriptions, Krugman leaves his textbook theory untouched and simply tries to win the shoutfest. Krugman’s often unbearable stridency seems to reflect an attempt to overcome the problems of democratic disagreement and incentive compatibility through sheer force of will–as if the deep reality of politics is no match for the rhetorical gifts and gold-plated reputation of Paul Freaking Krugman. It is as if his own imagined ability to singehandedly overwhelm the opposition is part of Krugman’s implicit model of how a politics-free macoeconomic theory can be made politically relevant in a time of perceived crisis, which is to say, a time of rank political opportunism.  

One can see this attitude reflected in Krugman’s advice to Obama, who he says “made a big mistake” by failing to mercilessly bully his opponents into submission: 

It’s time for Mr. Obama to go on the offensive. Above all, he must not shy away from pointing out that those who stand in the way of his plan, in the name of a discredited economic philosophy, are putting the nation’s future at risk.

As Krugman sees it, the big problem here is Obama, who lacks Krugman’s intransigent will to mercilessly crush any who would dare keep cartoon Keynesianism from coming to life.

Keep in mind this is legislation that Krugman admits would do little more than “improve our odds.” 

 

  • just noticing the pattern
    Boilerplate anti-Krugman. Starts by saying 'he is shrill," repeat several times, and end with a significant elaboration such as he is 'freaking" shrill. Laughs and pats on the back all around.
  • toad
    Krugman understands that policy is largely determined by the outcome of the public opinion shoutfest. Yet this recognition seems to have no effect on Krugman’s ideas. Rather than bring inside his models disagreement over economic theory and the lack of political incentive to faithfully apply them, which would lead him to radically revise his prescriptions, Krugman leaves his textbook theory untouched and simply tries to win the shoutfest.

    And this wrong, why? If you are convinced that your policy ideas are sound, and the only way to get them adopted is to win the shoutfest, why shouldn't you try to win the shoutfest?
  • Keyah
    Krugman's reputation in the area of macroeconomics is a sham. He spent the 2001-2004 period warning about deflation, a period during which the Fed flooded the economy with liquidity, commodities and real estate skyrocketed and the stage was set for what we are experiencing right know. Krugman's deflation hysteria contributed to create the climate in which Greenspan's and Bernanke's (helicopter Ben, "savings glut" Ben) dovishness took hold. It was only in 2005, after the 2004 election, and when the writing was already on the wall, when he came out with a column saying that the Fed had solved the popping of one bubble (the dot com) by creating another (real estate). That column is his claim to having been right all along, although it is inconsistent with his stated Keynsian beliefs (being consistent with what the Austrians had been saying since the mid 90's instead), and completely at odds with his position during the 2001-2004 period.

    Krugman's claim to authority must be challenged!!! Forcefully!!!
  • Northerner
    What's funny is this, from a recent Krugman post quoting the Center for American Progress: "The Senate compromise recovery and reinvestment legislation provides for 12 to 15 percent fewer jobs created or saved than the House-passed Recovery and Reinvestment Act despite costing slightly more. The House-passed legislation creates or saves between 430,000 and 538,000 more jobs than the Senate compromise."

    How on earth can anyone claim to know those figures so precisely? I want the people producing those figures to show proof that as of 1999, their models predicted the financial devastation that we're seeing now. No such proof that you knew it back in 1999? Then quit pretending that you have a crystal ball.
  • Pauline
    Deleted by NYT blog moderator:

    your comment is awaiting moderation.

    Paul –

    The problem with posts like this — as opposed to your (increasingly pertinent) wonkish posts and the occasional more or less neutral factual posts — is that it erodes your audience. Pointlessly. And at moments like this, the only relevant audience is the Congress on both sides of the aisle.

    Your role in all this is to provide the best possible economic analysis. To clarify confusions. To interpose inconvenient facts. Etc. (If you want a different role, you should ask Obama for a job.)

    Every time you post on this blog, you ought to ask yourself: If Keynes found himself in my position today (or Samuelson or Solow, etc.), what would they feel compelled to say. And what would he (or they) resist saying.

    To put it some entirely different way: Posts like this cheapen the brand. Why play club basketball with Galbraith when you can play in some other better league?

    Affectionately,

    Old friend
  • foo
    I admit it's fun to call Paul Krugman names but it doesn't prove anything -- one way or the other.

    To answer your question: "But is there any reason based in up-to-date economic theory to believe that this trillion dollar deficit-spending bill is not, as Barro says, garbage?" Yes, there is. Take another look at the interview you link to where Barro is asked "What would you say is the best empirical evidence there?" He explains that tax cuts worked in the past and then he says "I'm the middle of a study where I am trying to estimate this overall, going back to 1913 -- sort of constructing some measure of the overall effect of the tax rate at the margin, at the moment. I'm just looking at that now, actually..." Then when Baro is asked what kind of multiplier value on a dollar [of stimulus] he would expect, Barro doesn't give any numbers but says: "Well both things, but here I'm talking about the tax rate stuff. Get some measure of the effect of marginal tax rate that comes from the government -- federal, state, local. And then you can see what it looks like going down or going up and how the economy responds. And then, in addition to that, the government might be spending more or less money [...]"

    Maybe the interviewer didn't grill Barro hard enough but it just dosen't look like Barro has the numbers to claim that "incentive" tax cuts are x% better than "silly" tax cuts or increased government spending. Perhaps he will when he finishes his study but that's not much use right now.

    Also, what's so terrible about just "improving our odds"?
  • Tully
    The shorter version--As a journalist Krugman is a bully, and as an economist he's a whore.
  • Shelby
    Krugman leaves his textbook theory untouched and simply tries to win the shoutfest

    Or, his political passion displaces his economic thinking. He's a brilliant economist, but the purest of political hacks. When he's writing about something that doesn't fire up his political hindbrain, he's fabulous; otherwise he's unhinged.
  • Straight away - this is perfect. Came here via the Corner, and am grateful for it.

    The juvenile level of discourse about economic cause and effect has been jarring, though predictable. It seems that every time I hear something utterly nonsensical, irrelevant and/or buffoonish about the recession from my lefty friends, they are repeating something they read from Krugman.

    Paul, dude, go back to Enron. Oh ... right ...
  • Greg N.
    Paul Freaking Krugman. That was great; made me laugh.
  • Or as I wrote, the typical Congress person has a strong incentive to do things that he or she thinks will be good for his or her district and absolutely no incentive to think about (much less do things) for the world beyond. When you put 435 (or 255) of these similarly incentivized individuals together in a room, you don't magically wind up with a macroeconomist who has an incentive to care about "fiscal stimulus."

    http://ipeatunc.blogspot.com/2009/02/channel-fog-thickens-continent-cut-off.html
  • Here's my take on the Krugman's apparent to reconcile reality with his mental model of reality.

    http://ipeatunc.blogspot.com/2009/02/channel-fog-thickens-continent-cut-off.html
  • Craig
    Kj - show me a quote from Mankiw or Barro or Cochrane any of the other stimulus sceptics that even comes close to the vitriol emanating from Krugman or his side-kick De Long on a daily basis. My favourite was the Berekeley sage's claim a few weeks ago that all economists who oppose him are unethical shills for corporate special interests.
  • KJ
    I find it a bit silly to compare this to terrorist fear-mongering of the Bush/Cheney variety. That was about a constant state of fear with vigilance demanded no matter the policy. Wasn't that a multi-generational war with no end in sight that used it's unending nature as an excuse to hold terrorist POWs without trial.

    Quite a bit different than the stimulus scarefest we are seeing now. Presumably, you pass it and that's pretty much it. Unless this is indeed another Great Depression, our economy will start an upswing over the next year and the scare tactics will have ended with the stimulus. There is an end. Of course, I'm wrong here for one reason. Republicans will start using economic language to scare people once the bill passes simply to discredit the Democrats. I'm sure Will will join in.

    As for Barro, I don't think you can get much more strident than the quote above. He hardly seems in a position to complain about Krugman. He basically calls Summers an idiot in the linked interview. He is clearly as partisan as Mankiw and the other Republican tax-cut marauders that prowl our nation these days. He apparently is working away in his economics lab trying to prove tax cuts, especially for the rich, are always best according to the interview. Clearly he's the embodiment of rigorous scholarship.

    I think the one thing we learned from this whole debate is that economics is a very very very young field.
  • Also, that rationalization is a very old field.
  • Countries with a social democratic consensus don't have much of a problem with the politics of macroeconomic management. They just fight over the technicalities.

    Since we're talking about politics, what's the political path to libertarian society? Which side is going to give up the state first? If it's the lower classes, they're just going to get nailed by the plutocracy. If the plutocracy gives up first, I can see you maybe getting there.
  • ^^^^basically. That's why it's so painful to watch as the rare understandable criticism of stimulus is shoved aside, w/ the mantle of opposition taken up by the same people that were quite agreeable when it came to simply handing billions to corporate failures.

    The parts of gov't power that serve to prop up connected wealth FAR outweigh the ones ostensibly aimed to the poor. Until it's common for libertarians to acknowledge such publicly, no one will listen to us -- and I don't blame them.
  • mike
    Stimulus spending is like chemotherapy. You would not want to use it on a healty body. But when we are facing a deflationary spiral and you have already hit zero in the Fed interest rate, what's left?
  • BC
    "What's left" is internalizing the CBO report that says the economy will probably recover on its own by late 2009.
  • This is the new political reality. The Republican response to 9/11? EVERYONE PANIC! The Democratic response to Recession 2009? EVERYONE PANIC! If you can pull it off, you get to move the ball pretty far, but it's probably not in the right direction.
  • Paul O'Pinion
    I have always been of the opinion that the more celebrated economists are the ones who can eloquently explain why their predictions did not come true. It is glaringly apparent that Mr. Krugman is carrying the far-left, ultra-liberal bucket. Unbearable stridency is the spot-on description of the never affable Mr. Krugman. He is always fiercely critical of Democrats when they don't go postal-partisan against the Republicans. The guy gets big play being on the NYT's op-ed page, but geez, Louise, he really wears you out!
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