OPINION

Fraudulence of the hawks

In 2011, House Republicans, led by Paul Ryan, issued a report full of dire warnings about the dangers of budget deficits. "The United States is facing a crushing burden of debt," it declared, warning of a looming fiscal crisis that might soon "capsize" the economy. Citing the horrors of big deficits, Republicans refused to raise the federal debt ceiling, threatening to create financial turmoil and effectively blackmailing President Barack Obama into cutting spending on domestic programs.

How big were these horrifying deficits? In the 2012 fiscal year the federal deficit was $1.09 trillion. Much of this deficit, however, was a direct result of a depressed economy which held down revenues and increased outlays on unemployment benefits and other safety-net programs. The deficit fell rapidly over the next few years as the economy recovered.

This week Republicans, having just enacted a huge tax cut, cheerfully agreed to a budget deal that, according to independent experts, will push next year's deficit up to around $1.15 trillion--bigger than in 2012. This won't quite match 2012's red ink as a percentage of GDP; but this time none of the deficit will be a result of a depressed economy.

Wait, it gets worse. In 2012 there were strong economic reasons to run budget deficits. The economy was still suffering the after-effects of the 2008 financial crisis. Unemployment was around 8 percent. And the Federal Reserve, which normally takes the lead in fighting slumps, had very limited ammunition: It had already cut interest rates to zero, and its policy of "quantitative easing"--purchasing longer-term debt--was of questionable effectiveness. (Ryan, among others, fiercely attacked the Fed's efforts, which he claimed--wrongly--would "debase the currency.")

The state of the economy in 2012 was exactly the kind of situation in which running budget deficits is actually a good thing, because they help sustain overall spending. By contrast, there is no comparable case for deficits now, with the economy near full employment and the Fed raising interest rates to head off potential inflation. (Maybe the Fed is moving too soon, but the contrast with 2012 is still extreme.)

If anything, we should be using this time of relatively full employment to pay down debt, or at least reduce it relative to GDP. "The boom, not the slump, is the time for austerity at the Treasury," wrote John Maynard Keynes. But Republicans have turned that sage advice on its head. They are providing more stimulus to an economy with 4 percent unemployment than they were willing to allow an economy with 8 percent unemployment.

There have been many news-analysis pieces asking why Republicans have changed their views on deficit spending. But let's be serious: Their views haven't changed at all. They never really cared about debt and deficits; it was a fraud all along. All that has changed is the fact that a Republican now sits in the White House.

How do we know Republicans were never sincere about the deficit? It was obvious, even at the time, to anyone who looked at their fiscal proposals. These proposals always involved giant tax cuts for the wealthy--funny how that worked--offset by savage cuts in social benefits. Even so, assertions that deficits would go down depended entirely on assuming lots of revenue from closing unspecified loopholes and huge savings from cutting unspecified government programs.

Even at the peak of their deficit-hawk posturing, all Republicans really had to offer was redistribution from the poor to the rich.

However, pretending to care about the deficit served several useful political purposes. It was a way to push for cuts in social programs. It was also a way to hobble Obama's presidency.

I don't think it's unfair to suggest that there was an element of deliberate economic sabotage. After all, Republicans weren't just vehemently opposed to fiscal stimulus; they were also vehemently opposed to monetary stimulus. Basically they were against anything that might help the economy on Obama's watch.

Now Obama is gone, and suddenly deficits don't matter.

But let me not just bash Republicans. Let me also bash their enablers--all those who were duped into believing their claims to be deficit hawks or pretended to believe them in order to appear balanced and bipartisan. Such people did America a great disservice.

And they will continue to do a great disservice if they obscure what's happening now. Please, let's not talk about the wrongheadedness of fiscal policy--about imposing austerity in a depressed economy, then running up the deficit when we're already near full employment--as a problem of "political dysfunction" or assert that both parties are to blame. Democrats didn't block stimulus when the economy needed it, or push a tax cut that will worsen inequality and explode the national debt.

No, this is all about Republican bad faith. Everything they said about budgets, every step of the way, was fraudulent. And nobody should believe anything they say now.

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Paul Krugman, who won the 2008 Nobel Prize in economics, writes for the New York Times.

Editorial on 02/10/2018

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