econintersect.com
  • 토토사이트
    • 카지노사이트
    • 도박사이트
    • 룰렛 사이트
    • 라이브카지노
    • 바카라사이트
    • 안전카지노
  • 경제
  • 파이낸스
  • 정치
  • 투자
No Result
View All Result
  • 토토사이트
    • 카지노사이트
    • 도박사이트
    • 룰렛 사이트
    • 라이브카지노
    • 바카라사이트
    • 안전카지노
  • 경제
  • 파이낸스
  • 정치
  • 투자
No Result
View All Result
econintersect.com
No Result
View All Result

In the Long Run We Are All – What?!

admin by admin
3월 10, 2013
in 미분류
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS

by Dirk Ehnts, Econoblog101

The European policy makers continue their deadly embrace of Keynes, misusing his ideas, misinterpreting his ideas, omitting his ideas. Here is an extract of a speech by Benoît Cœuré, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB, at the European Conference at Harvard (kudos to Miguel for this quote and the fourth):

John Maynard Keynes famously said: “The long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead”. [5] And yet societies live in the long run. Today’s choices influence tomorrow’s outcomes, just as yesterday’s decisions affect today’s situation. This is even truer in a low-growth, low- interest-rate environment, which increases the discounted value of tomorrow’s costs and benefits. The importance of the long run was widely shown by the crisis. It was doubt about the accumulation and sustainability of debt which caused Greece and then Ireland and Portugal to lose access to markets and which associated the same risk with other Member States. And it is doubt about the stability of the political system as well as its ability to adopt legitimate, effective and sustainable public policies that worries citizens in many euro area countries.

This is the worst economic quackery I have seen from a central banker in a long while. Have a look at the original quotation from Keynes in its context:

The long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task if in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us that when the storm is past the ocean is flat again.

Now let us re-read the second half of the Benoît Cœuré quote from above:

The importance of the long run was widely shown by the crisis. It was doubt about the accumulation and sustainability of debt which caused Greece and then Ireland and Portugal to lose access to markets and which associated the same risk with other Member States. And it is doubt about the stability of the political system as well as its ability to adopt legitimate, effective and sustainable public policies that worries citizens in many euro area countries.

This has nothing to do with what Keynes said. Keynes pointed out that the long run was not important, that short-run problems need short-run solutions. Economists which solve short-run problems by pointing out that in the long run everything will be fine again are mistaken. This, however, is exactly what the ECB’s policies do: you need to fix your long-run debt problems and you will grow again. Keynes himself thought differently in the General Theory (ch. 10 – if you read carefully you will notice why people say that Keynes set out to save capitalism, not destroy it):

Thus we are so sensible, have schooled ourselves to so close a semblance of prudent financiers, taking careful thought before we add to the “financial” burdens of posterity by building them houses to live in, that we have no such easy escape from the sufferings of unemployment. We have to accept them [the “financial burdens of posterity (ed.)] as an inevitable result of applying to the conduct of the State the maxims which are best calculated to “enrich” an individual by enabling him to pile up claims to enjoyment which he does not intend to exercise at any definite time.

I welcome the fact that the European institutions start to incorporate Keynes and his ideas into their speeches and policies (see Mr Rehn’s recent comments), but I have yet to read a single sentence in which someone from the troika makes sense of Keynes and his ideas. Until now, it all comes down to: “see, we are Keynesians, too, so there is no alternative.” The Spanish newspaper EL PAIS calls it smearing Keynes(ianism). And Europe continues to fall apart because its policy elite has lost its ability to discuss and evaluate ideas.

Previous Post

Emerging Market Rate Cuts

Next Post

The Week Ahead: With Less Data Opinions are Uninhibited

Related Posts

Bitcoin Is Finally Trading Perfectly Like 'Digital Gold'
Economics

Bitcoin Is Finally Trading Perfectly Like ‘Digital Gold’

by admin
Namibia Will Regulate And Not Ban Crypto With New Law
Finance

Namibia Will Regulate And Not Ban Crypto With New Law

by admin
6,746 ETH Valued At $12M Was Just Burned
Economics

6,746 ETH Valued At $12M Was Just Burned

by admin
Bitcoin Is Steady Above $29,000 Awaiting US NFP Figures
Economics

Bitcoin: What Next After Consolidation Ends?

by admin
US Government Offloads Another 8,200 Bitcoin – On-chain Data
Economics

US Government Offloads Another 8,200 Bitcoin – On-chain Data

by admin
Next Post

The Week Ahead: With Less Data Opinions are Uninhibited

답글 남기기 응답 취소

이메일 주소는 공개되지 않습니다. 필수 필드는 *로 표시됩니다

Browse by Category

  • Business
  • Econ Intersect News
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Politics
  • Uncategorized

Browse by Tags

adoption altcoins bank banking banks Binance Bitcoin Bitcoin market blockchain BTC BTC price business China crypto crypto adoption cryptocurrency crypto exchange crypto market crypto regulation decentralized finance DeFi Elon Musk ETH Ethereum Europe Federal Reserve finance FTX inflation investment market analysis Metaverse NFT nonfungible tokens oil market price analysis recession regulation Russia stock market technology Tesla the UK the US Twitter

Categories

  • Business
  • Econ Intersect News
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Politics
  • Uncategorized

© Copyright 2024 EconIntersect

No Result
View All Result
  • 토토사이트
    • 카지노사이트
    • 도박사이트
    • 룰렛 사이트
    • 라이브카지노
    • 바카라사이트
    • 안전카지노
  • 경제
  • 파이낸스
  • 정치
  • 투자

© Copyright 2024 EconIntersect