Matt Yglesias says it's puzzling that Ben Bernanke isn't adopting a more expansionary monetary policy in order to jumpstart the job market. Brad DeLong says, "I am puzzled too." A bunch of other liberally inclined economists have said similar things recently.Sad that simple observations like this can't be found in mainstream media. You have to go scrounging around in left wing media to find basic facts being discussed. No wonder the electorate keeps pulling the wrong lever!
I dunno. I guess I wish we could stop pretending to be surprised by this. Ben Bernanke may be a specialist in economic contractions, but he's also a mainstream conservative economist. And mainstream conservatives have always been more concerned with inflation than with unemployment. Likewise, they tend to be opposed to entitlement spending, opposed to serious financial regulation, and opposed to expanded consumer protections. And guess what? Bernanke is more concerned with inflation than with unemployment and he's opposed to entitlement spending, serious financial regulation, and expanded consumer protections.
This was all pretty plain several months ago, when virtually every liberally-minded economist supported Bernanke's reappointment. So what's the point of bellyaching about it now?
For what it's worth, I'm surprisingly bitter about this and I keep stewing over it. Maybe I'm just being an asshole. But I've been reading liberal economists yammer on for years about liberal economic policies, so when an actual opportunity came along to appoint a liberal economist to an important position it was really disappointing to see them all circle the wagons around Bernanke almost instantly. It felt like the worst kind of professional backscratching.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Kevin Drum Exposes the Real Ben Bernanke
The facts are in plain sight, but all those people yammering to reappoint Ben Bernanke seem unable to spot the facts. Kevin Drum's article in Mother Jones reports that the emperor has no clothes:
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