Krugman Monday!!!

I'm flattered that you are always imitating me, but I don't think you will get yourself out of the bottom tier of posters like this. You just don't pull it off. You lack that certain je ne sais quoi shall we say.
 
The funny thing is that people actually believe that this is a debunking of anything Krugman has actually written. But let's take a closer look at the actual "data" relied on. Let's take a look at the the Iceland example, since it appears first:

In Iceland, which didn’t throw taxpayer money at the banks, government spending was slashed from 57.6% of GDP in 2008 to 46.5% in 2012.

In 2007, government spending in Iceland was 42.3% of GDP. It increased substantially in 2008 (to 57.7%) in response to the crisis, which high spending continued above 50% in 2009 (51%) and 2010 (51.5%). So, while it's true that Iceland didn't throw taxpayer money at banks, it isn't true that Iceland "slashed" spending. Instead, it increased it. Substantially. And as the economy recovered in 2011, it reduced spending, albeint not to pre-recession levels (47.3 in 2011). It is appropriately reducing spending as a percentage of GDP (both because GDP is increasing and becuase less spending is necessary further out from the crisis).

Moving on:

The deficit fell from 12.9% of GDP to 3.4%. The economy began to recover in 2011.

In 2007, the Icelandic government ran a 5.4% surplus. When the shit hit the fan, it increased spending dramatically to a 13.5% deficit (not sure where the 12.9 figure comes from. My numbers are from Eurostat), which increased spending continued in 2009 (10% deficit), 2010 (10.1% deficit) and tapered off in 2011 as the economy recovered (5.4% deficit). The idea that Iceland is an austerity success story is just plain horseshit.

Continuing:

Iceland’s economic boost from fiscal frugality was neither unorthodox nor unique.

Quite right, it's non-existent. Not true. A falsehood.
 
The funny thing is that people actually believe that this is a debunking of anything Krugman has actually written. But let's take a closer look at the actual "data" relied on. Let's take a look at the the Iceland example, since it appears first:

In 2007, government spending in Iceland was 42.3% of GDP. It increased substantially in 2008 (to 57.7%) in response to the crisis, which high spending continued above 50% in 2009 (51%) and 2010 (51.5%). So, while it's true that Iceland didn't throw taxpayer money at banks, it isn't true that Iceland "slashed" spending. Instead, it increased it. Substantially. And as the economy recovered in 2011, it reduced spending, albeint not to pre-recession levels (47.3 in 2011). It is appropriately reducing spending as a percentage of GDP (both because GDP is increasing and becuase less spending is necessary further out from the crisis).

Moving on:



In 2007, the Icelandic government ran a 5.4% surplus. When the shit hit the fan, it increased spending dramatically to a 13.5% deficit (not sure where the 12.9 figure comes from. My numbers are from Eurostat), which increased spending continued in 2009 (10% deficit), 2010 (10.1% deficit) and tapered off in 2011 as the economy recovered (5.4% deficit). The idea that Iceland is an austerity success story is just plain horseshit.

Continuing:

Quite right, it's non-existent. Not true. A falsehood.

LMAO... now show the same numbers from 2007 for the PIIGS, then show us what they are today and tell us again about the European austerity. Funny how that works.

Also would love to see the links for the data you quote
 
Shorter SF: Sure, my link is full of shit but what about this other thing over here?

No Dung... you are full of shit. Because you know precisely what will happen if you show us what the PIIGS were spending prior to 2007 and now. There is no austerity as you have proclaimed time and again. Their is no austerity in the PIGGS as Krugman has proclaimed.

My point is that you continually flip your baseline to fit your storyline. Which I knew would be the case yet again. But thanks for proving the point that Krugman and you his devoted little parrot are full of shit.
 
Hey, remember when I showed SF that in real dollar terms there have indeed been spending cuts across the EU and not just cuts to spending growth and then a short while later it was reported that economic contraction across the EU was higher than exptected?

Good times.
 
I'm flattered that you are always imitating me, but I don't think you will get yourself out of the bottom tier of posters like this. You just don't pull it off. You lack that certain je ne sais quoi shall we say.
If that's anything like herpes I bet he does have it!!!
 
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