A Conversation on the Economy with Joe Stiglitz and Paul Krugman
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 มิ.ย. 2024
- What do you get when you put two of the most well known and most widely cited economists in the world, both Nobel laureates, on stage together? A healthy dose of economic reality.
That's what happened Tuesday night at the Fashion Institute of Technology's Haft Auditorium in New York City at an INET-sponsored event featuring Paul Krugman and Joseph Stiglitz in a "Conversation on the State of the Economy," moderated by INET Executive Director Rob Johnson. - ภาพยนตร์และแอนิเมชัน
Nobody is going to mention the fact that this video is almost 10 years old with this amazing quality? Big applause.
I think this is Paul Giamatti's finest ever performance. His Krugman is a masterclass!
Amazing, just speechless, that the Fashion Institute of Technology has been the initiator of this great conversation. #EconomicInsights
That was a good lecture. These guys need to be on TV more so others and see some truth in our economic system.
Wonderfully stimulating conversation. I'm British, living in poor old Portugal and have been a regular visitor to the US as well as countries around Europe. These blokes are talking what used to be the received economic wisdom...how did we let the ground get shifted to allow the present shambles?Let's shift it back.please.
Sound money, and a little bit of freedom will take us much farther than anything these two can create.
Great to see them both on stage.
Extremely interesting video for a economy stundent like myself. It's extremely nice to see that those great economists engage in a productive discussion and its simply very enlightend to listen
Good to see these guys like each other so much. .
I actually kind of liked the intro. She covers in a very real way how the economic debate we are having is not an abstract concern, but instead a dramatic impact on the lives of her students.
Stuff starts at 10:00
10:10
5) In economics, when we are taught supply and demand, for some reason, the most interesting case, the case where supply force turns around and points in the same direction as the demand force, is never taught from what I can tell. Of course the behavior is that you move very, very fast, and this is a perfect, simple explanation for several economic phenomena of moving very, very, fast (eg. V-shaped labor supply -> Great Depression, V-shaped foreign currency demand -> hyperinflation, etc.) Why?
Paul Krugman makes some good points on the effects of free trade on wealth inequality, but I offer the following considerations. 1) People make much of the deficit we have had since 1980, but what they overlook is that it has happened in the face of a consistent strong dollar. In order to make basic supply and demand work, you have to balance that deficit with something and the only thing left is capital dollars. Thus the obscene deficit is related to obscene capital liquidity in origin.
I don't know about Giamatti's performance as Paul Krugman. But Richard Dreyfuss' performance as Joe Stiglitz was outstanding. :)
Secretary Geithner gave an interview on C-Span where he said that Medicare and Medicaid were actually a fairly small percentage of the GDP and that the main contributor to the national debt was the Bush tax cuts. And, as Ronald Reagan said "social security has nothing to do with the debt." It is also true that the Senate already passed a tax package largely representing the Simpson-Boles plan but, as speaker, Boehner wouldn't even offer it up for a vote.
Terrific discussion.
Good Discussion of Arrow and health care systems and interface between medical costs and the budget 41:20 - 57:00
Expected a better and clearer answer for the question on moral code for economists to live by (asked by the second person from the audience)
In a depressed economy, where huge amounts of private capital are sitting idly by, expanding government borrowing doesn't take money from the private sector it gives it an opportunity to be productive via state action. Fact is, if we want to get out of this situation, demand needs to grow and government spending offers us a way to do so.
While I am not a fan of Canadian monetary policy, (luckily Carney is leaving) but I feel so grateful that we do not have 'economists' such as these. I find it incredible that people can believe that short term stimulus and disregard long term gain. Truly one of the greatest declines in all of history in standard of living. Will be a great history book.
Great speech FIT!
"a rejection of both theory and evidence" I love this statement!
But, I'll tell you what's hard to ignore is that Joe Stiglitz sounds just like Kent Hovand...
BUT, that said... This was a great discussion! I'm really glad this video was posted...
Very funny! Have you given any thought to taking your show on the road?
At 42:10 Paul Krugman mentions another economist, I couldn't hear, which one he said?
floopy312 Ken Arrow
Eli Gregory thank you :)
floopy312 parakalo :)
I think these two are spot on about just about everything, but I do wish Stiglitz would elaborate when he mentions that those countries with the high labour market flexibility have fared worse in the economic crisis than those with more rigid labour markets. European countries like Spain, France and Italy haven't done brilliantly..., and I think that the high unemployment in these places can be credited to this rigidity.
Thanks
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3) One thing you learn in the software industry is that custom products always have more bugs than mass market products even if they are written by highly skilled individuals. Do you have any evidence that a similar effect hurts rich people even when they have more money when they reduce the market size of their most high-end products? This would certainly change the discussion if it were true.
Yep, I totally agree with you.
Looks good - checking the social connections with a comment on this video.
... far faster than improved local efficiency can push the line out. And actually, contrary to what you hear on certain news stations, paying less dollars for people to spend the same amount of time doing the same amount of work does nothing to push the Pareto curve out. (BTW, I talk about the ratio of wages to revenues because that effectively removes inflation from the picture and lets you study economic structure in isolation).
Canada cut public spending in the mid-90s, but the economy was not in recession and the Canadian dollar was low, which helped exports.
This is very true. But with the addition of Federal spending on military industry, i.e. a boost.
Correction, they ARE NOT NOBEL LAUREATES. Do the research. The economics prize was created by the Sweden Central Bank, 75 years after the Nobels were created.
"Were the war to end suddenly within the next 6 months, were we again planning to wind up our war effort in the greatest haste, to demobilize our armed forces, to liquidate price controls, to shift from astronomical deficits to even the large deficits of the thirties-then there would be ushered in the greatest period of unemployment and industrial dislocation which any economy has ever faced.” Paul Samuelson, 1943, Keynesian Economist.
this. this. notes to come.
Agreed that the Fed did not do the right thing by exercising tight monetary policy. But the evidence (Japan, Great Recession) suggests that monetary policy alone may not have been enough.
What he said was: "and, thanks to Hitler", which is used in the context of "and, because of Hitler", which represents an historical fact. And, while you may fundamentally disagree with Krugman, he is absolutely not a fool.
The quality of this video is thought ya'll! But seriously it is, especially for an economic discussion.
You can't ease loaning standards and increase inventory at the same time, it inflates the prices un-naturally and you get a housing bubble.
Using Krugman's logic, arming a bunch of school kids with rocks and having them break windows in our communities would help the economy. This is why I called him a fool. Production, not destruction, creates economic opportunities for us all. Hence, the broken window fallacy.
4) At least to the layperson, one of the biggest arguments against free international trade is that of tax sovereignty. The classic example within the US is Red states will bid for industry with promises of low taxes and this has the effect of shifting tax burden from large companies to small companies. Similar issues occur across countries, but under agreements like NAFTA are even more extreme. Could you speak to the idea of zero tariffs really meaning negative tariffs?
What do you mean by 'the stock of money is contracted'? .. And by the way, I agree with you that when banks (in the current banking system) stop loaning money, there will be foreclosures and everybody starts to fail. But you want to pursue a bad system, instead of changing it.
People should consider those unrealistic assumptions before referring to any theories. I always feel rather surprised and curious that those people who are persuading and convincing people using theories that what should be considered as rational, what is rationality, what people would act under rationality seem to have violated their assumptions of rationality. If people are rational, there is no need to educate the people what is rational. The rationality should be reflected on their behavior
If you look at history, after the Great Depression of the 30's, spending was necessary to climb out of the financial disaster. President Carter cut spending due to a mild recession when he was in office and it did finally came through after Reagan took office but people really suffered and thought Carter was disconnected. As long as the Bush tax cuts are taking money out of circulation by padding rich bank accounts, the only solution is to print more money.
Evidence suggest that the Great Depression was over in Great Britain by 1933, and Britain, in fact, enjoyed very rapid economic growth from 1931 onwards. Yes, they left the gold standard, but that was only because the US was not playing by the rules of the game with the gold standard.
It's interesting how the FED has messed up so many times. They are responsible for the greatest economic calamity of all time. How would you reform the FED to prevent another Great Depression?
12:35 sick dude
For easier access: click here: 9:00
It was Quote mined. That's all. I know the original post. I have read it. Paul has already addressed what this post means several times. If you guys want to continue to call him a liar, it's only because you aren't willing to give up your straw punching bag.
Wonderful 💋 Presentation
Read Duncan Lewis on decision making under uncertainty.
I know this because, Paul Krugman himself admitted that he doesn't know how the government should tackle the debt in the future, (instead he advocated a 73 percent tax rate on rich people, alongside strong anti-competitive pro-big business regulations).
paul giamatti should play paul krugman in a movie.
Why does master Krugman does not want to debate R. Murphy for an hour and by that donate more than 100k to hungry New Yorkers !?
krugmandebate com
From 1929-33, the total quantity of money in the US, the amount of currency and the amount of bank deposits, went down by 1/3. The total amount of banks went down by 1/3. Why did the quantity of the money supply decline? If the FED prevented the money decline, there may have been a recession, but it would have been a garden variety recession. The Great Depression was caused by the failure by the FED to implement responsible monetary policy.
The Great Depression was a deflationary depression caused by a failure of the Federal Reserve to act as it was intended to. In my opinion, monetary expansion, as the principal reason why the US got out of the Great Depression. In Great Britain, the Great Depression was over by 1933, and Britain, in fact, enjoyed very rapid economic growth from 1931 onwards.
Krugman did not advocate for a housing bubble. Read the source material. "Dubya's Double Dip."
The nature 1921 depression was very different from the Great Depression. The deflation of the Great Depression was powered by a storm of deleveraging due to the collapse of the credit bubble. as opposed to 1921 when it was simply a sudden change in the labor force and tight Fed policy-- very much like the recessions ranging from the 40s to the 80s. They're two very different diseases.
Read Richard Koo's book to learn more about Japan. Japan maintained GDP growth despite national asset prices falling 25%. If you don't want to read his book, then watch his videos on TH-cam. The videos make you appreciate actually what Japan did.
Ballers
Re: Fatalism - excellent point and very well stated. Thank you! Ditto Arrow and the health care discussion.
Now, If I were part of the question and answer:
1) Why do people ignore the strong growth between 1933 and 1938 especially since the problems of 1937 are so well understood? I would argue that all WWII did was get the country to 1944 GDP and employment in 1942 based on New Deal growth. I would suggest that liberals are just setting themselves up for the broken window argument.
Is austerity working for the Greeks? It's working well for global bankers who have been bailed out by governments perhaps.
the correct phrase would be: some keynesians cried disaster, though you would have known that if you actually read Samuelson's articles (he calls these keynesians optimists ) and Keynes himself rejected Samuelson's view too. I would also note that the post war boom is perfectly consistent with Keynesian theory. Post War II era was a time of increased government spending and tax cuts with expansions on welfare
I'm not pissed off at all, i just advocated for a certain helpful economic policy.
9:00 skip commercials
It goes back further than that. The decline of England as a world economic power began in 1850 with the acceptance of Smith-Ricardo and the passing of the corn laws.
Fashion Institute of Technology ! Hmmm ...
Lets hear Noam Chomsky speak of Joseph Stiglitz also.
Maybe you could explain how all recessions were self correcting in the 1800s.
Wow. You certainly have a way of characterizing someone who you don't know or have never met.
Do you use that style of analysis when you look at the economy?
All spending = income
more spending= more sales= more production = more hiring= lower unemployment= recovery.
Except 250k employed in a single month (february, twice the amount expected) and Wall Street hitting over it's own historical record.
And? He wanted more people to build houses. He didn't want the prices of housing to go up. I think if you were to look around his Blog you would find many posts where he called for stricter regulation.
We're indeed doing fairly well in Sweden! And Stockholm in summer is unparalleled! ;)
The people must demand that the bankers control of the monetary system be restored to the benefit of society and not to the service of private bankers.
The key is demand. So the side arguing against debt believes there is pent up demand. I argue at zero interest rates, what is holding them back from growing? It is time to spend on infrastructure and to stop being wasteful on our offense department and on education.
I mean that when the money supply or stock of money, same diff to me. I would like a system where the public does not have to be liable to foreign governments. The government should not have to borrow money from any institution.
I would have liked to have seen Professor Richard Wolf in this converstation
well he is only slightly more socialist than these two gentlemen
@@martonk really great replying to a comment from 7 years ago.
@@sanford943 well you did write back so it turned out not to be a waste of time.
You could have just left me there looking like an idiot but you couldn't :P
@@martonk I just find it interesting that some one would see I comment I made so long ago. I could have been six feet under by now. I think Wolff is great as well as Michael Hudson. Neither one gets any mainstream media attention.
@@sanford943 now that you put it like that I'm quite relieved that you are not 6 feet under, morbid thought.
But I would say that Wolff does get some media coverage, I have first seen him when my business english teacher showed me one of his short interviews when he was on rtv, and there were many instances of that.
Unfortunately I don't really see eye to eye with him to put it mildly, since I'm an economics students affiliated with the Austrian school
2) I think that Dr Krugman and I agree in direction, but disagree in magnitude on how wealth inequality is impacted by free trade. My personal reasoning starts with the idea that Pareto efficiency is not really as relevant to real world economics as most economists assume. Instead, in a right-wing economy like the US, distance from the curve (Pareto inefficiency) is far more important than location of the curve. Weak wage pricing power pushes you inward (cont)
Right, you get it. Also:
'Heritage foundation'
'Cato'
'FreedomWorks'
'Americans for Prosperity'
'Reason Foundation'
'Manhattan Institute'
'United States chamber of Commerce'
'Mercatus Centre'
'American Legislative Exchange Council'
'Fraser Institute'
'American Enterprise Institute'
The chirping of parrots
'bah bah bah'
None of those in any way show how he advocated creation of housing bubble, nor that he endorsed it. At best, it shows how he was a bit naive and optimistic. Though I can see why would Von Mises Instutite see it as if he was calling for a housing bubble.
2) If you look at Ronald Reagan's history, then I don't think that the missing revenue from tax breaks for the rich really explain the full effects of Reaganism. For example, I don't see why they explain the massive trade deficits. Based on what I have seen, the extra money in the hands of the rich have actually distorted the economy in ways that hurt growth even if you run up big deficits, don't stop spending, and just consider it "free money". Is that going too far?
"When that war spending ended, Keynesians cried disaster."
That's a bold assertion. Of course you are wrong in making it considering that there really weren't any Keynesians at the time and they wouldn't have cried disaster anyway.
What the WW2 spending did was allow the private sector to deleverage properly easing the deflationary pressure on the money supply and freeing up capital rather than having shops cope with decreased sales by laying off worker thus compounding the problem.
Recessions are caused when the stock of money is contracted. I agree that the government through various programs and subsidies can prop up markets. But I believe the real problem is that private banks control the money supply. And the debt is always greater than the actual money supply, since the money was created as debt. Therefore it cannot be paid back by borrowing more money(Stimulus). So no, austerity does not mean the world will end, when banks stop loaning money is when the world ends.
Scandinavia is blessed with a strong social capital. In other worlds there is a well established trust relationships between the members that consist the society but the society as whole and the state as the administration body as well) thus the ethical hazard for Cayman Islands is quiet low, is not like Deutschland where the government has to pay agents in order to "catch" the tax-avoiders.
I'm not going to debate with you because I think Keynesianism has merit--empirically and intuitively--in a crisis. But I'll make two points 1) Krugman's social ideology infects his economics--e.g. his endorsement of inflation as a redistributionary instrument; and 2) Of course stimulus will work better than austerity in the short term--the neoclassical counter that this is a myopic position to take. Are they right? I think there is long term evidence to suggest not--but that wasn't your point.
Starts at 9 minutes.
Economics is a social science
Well those two jokes did happen to call the bubble and a recession. Krugman has articles back in 2005 warning of the housing bubble. No one could have known when exactly it would hit--not even Peter. The point is despite calling it, Peter still lost his clients loads of money during the housing collapse. Every other component of his thesis was actually the inverse of what happened. There were people who weren't even aware of a bubble who did better than peter. It's actually embarrassing.
Rothbard (again! the guy was a genius after all) gave a good lecture on the character of Keynes which you can find here on youtube. Just search 'keynes the man' - It's the first vid. Not that you'll actually bother to watch it. Lmfao.
I am not 100% sure but I believe government debt to GDP is only around 67-69%. And if recall correctly after world war two it was well over 100%, and government spending continue to grow. The size of your government debt is quite substantial, but it certainly is not unique in your countries history.
Is Ron Paul an economist?
How often do you have to be wrong to become a famous economist?
Well Britain never experienced the boom of the 1920s, so it is likely that they did not have a credit bubble in the same way we did. Any slump they may have felt was probably more of an aftershock from the crash of other countries.
It's not a non-sequitur. Destruction is bad for the economy.
I am a huge fan of both of these economists, but savings rate?
National Savings Rate as it is usually used amounts to a category error, similar to National Pregnancy rate. Just as it turns out that each man woman and child in the country is an average of 3 days pregnant, averaging the savings rate of the rich and the poor is fundamentally silly, since they measure directly opposite things. If you want to increase the savings rate, simply make taxes less progressive. (cont)
I'm just a part time troll, really. Certain phrases trigger it in me
'Inflation is way higher than the fed says!'
'money printing!'
'deduction'
'malinvestment'
'coercion'
'artificially low'
'fiat currency'
'this is socialism'
Etc.
What do you believe ended the great depression?
"I Love The Smell Of Death Threats In The Morning. Haven’t gotten one of those in a while; I was starting to think I was losing my touch." Paul Krugman on his blog. Killing someone whose ideas are too persuasive is a good idea? Is this your idea of democracy? Are you fearful of that voters will be persuaded by a Nobel winner who documents his opinions on peer reviewed research?
but.. wheres bob murphy?
Every statement you make on this thread gets more and more ridiculous. It's really pretty amazing.