NPR
interviewed an economist from the AEI, and even he couldn't deny that
European austerity hurt growth and what they needed instead was
Keynesian stimulus.
This is no big news to those who have been following this
issue, but it's good to see almost universal agreement that austerity
was the main driver of Europe's double-dip and likely deeper current
recession. Only head-in-the-sand EU officials are saying that austerity
was necessary to "stabilize the financial markets" and give investors
confidence to buy PIIGS bonds. But that is insincere, as it was likely
the ECB's concurrent quantitative easing measures and "whatever it
takes" declaration (after years of indecision and deliberation) that
calmed the markets.All opinions and topics are welcomed and respected. Though we tend to hold non-mainstream views and seek to explore deeper past the simplified headlines. This blog is a collection of email conversations I have had with 30 other people, with names removed. Please realize that a few postings are intended to be inflammatory or comedic, but not as personal attacks on anyone (who doesn't deserve it). :)
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