NEW YORK--So, it seems that we arent going to have a second Great Depression after all. What saved us?
The answer, basically, is Big Government.
Just to be clear: the economic situation remains terrible, indeed, worse than almost anyone thought possible not long ago.
The nation has lost 6.7 million jobs since the recession began.
Once you take into account the need to find employment for a growing working-age population, were probably around 9 million jobs short of where we should be.
The job market still hasnt turned around--that slight dip in the measured unemployment rate last month was probably a statistical fluke.
We havent yet reached the point at which things are, actually, improving; for now, all we have to celebrate are indications that things are getting worse more slowly.
For all that, however, the latest flurry of economic reports suggests that the economy has backed up several paces from the edge of the abyss.
A few months ago, the possibility of falling into the abyss seemed all too real.
The financial panic of late 2008 was as severe, in some ways, as the banking panic of the early 1930s, and, for a while, key economic indicators--world trade, world industrial production, even stock prices--were falling as fast as or faster than they did in 1929-30.
However, in the 1930s, the trend lines just kept heading down. This time, the plunge appears to be ending after just one terrible year.
So, what saved us from a full replay of the Great Depression?
The answer, almost surely, lies in the very different role played by government.
Probably the most important aspect of the governments role in this crisis isnt what it has done, but what it hasnt done: unlike the private sector, the federal government hasnt slashed spending as its income has fallen.
(State and local governments are a different story.)
Tax receipts are way down, but Social Security checks are still going out. Medicare is still covering hospital bills. Federal employees, from judges to park rangers to soldiers, are still being paid.
All of this has helped support the economy in its time of need, in a way that didnt happen back in 1930, when federal spending was a much smaller percentage of Gross Domestic Product.
Yes, this means that budget deficits--which are a bad thing in normal times--are actually a good thing right now.
In addition to having this automatic stabilizing effect, the government has stepped in to rescue the financial sector. You can argue (and I would) that the bailouts of financial firms could and should have been handled better, that taxpayers have paid too much and received too little.
Yet, its possible to be dissatisfied, even angry, about the way the financial bailouts have worked while acknowledging that without these bailouts things would have been much worse.
The point is that this time, unlike in the 1930s, the government didnt take a hands-off attitude while much of the banking system collapsed.
Thats another reason were not living through Great Depression II.
Last and probably least, but by no means trivial, have been the deliberate efforts of the government to pump up the economy.
From the beginning, I argued that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (a.k.a., the Obama stimulus plan) was too small.
Nonetheless, reasonable estimates suggest that around a million more Americans are working now than would have been employed without that plan--a number that will grow over time--and that the stimulus has played a significant role in pulling the economy out of its free fall.
All in all, then, the government has played a crucial stabilizing role in this economic crisis.
Ronald Reagan was wrong: sometimes the private sector is the problem, and government is the solution.
Arent you glad that right now the government is being run by people who dont hate government?
We dont know what the economic policies of a McCain-Palin administration would have been.
We do know, however, what Republicans in opposition have been saying--and it boils down to demanding that the government stop standing in the way of a possible depression.
Im not just talking about opposition to the stimulus. Leading Republicans want to do away with automatic stabilizers, too.
Back in March, U.S. Rep. John Boehner (Rep., Ohio), the House minority leader, declared that, since families were suffering, its time for government to tighten their belts and show the American people that we get it. Fortunately, his advice was ignored.
Im still very worried about the economy.
Theres still, I fear, a substantial chance that unemployment will remain high for a very long time, but we appear to have averted the worst: utter catastrophe no longer seems likely.
Big Government, run by people who understand its virtues, is the reason why.
Ronald Reagan was wrong: sometimes the private sector is the problem, and government is the solution
.We dont know what the economic policies of a McCain-Palin administration would have been
.but we do know what Republicans in opposition [to the Obama stimulus plan:] demanding that government stop standing in the way of a possible depression.
--Paul Krugman, New York Times