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by: Paul Krugman  |  Rolling Stone

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Nobel Prize winning economist, Paul Krugman, offers advice for the new administration. (Photo: Jeff Zelevansky / Getty)

A Letter to the new president. What Obama must do.

    Dear Mr. President:

    Like FDR three-quarters of a century ago, you're taking charge at a moment when all the old certainties have vanished, all the conventional wisdom been proved wrong. We're not living in a world you or anyone else expected to see. Many presidents have to deal with crises, but very few have been forced to deal from Day One with a crisis on the scale America now faces.

    So, what should you do?

    In this letter I won't try to offer advice about everything. For the most part I'll stick to economics, or matters that bear on economics. I'll also focus on things I think you can or should achieve in your first year in office. The extent to which your administration succeeds or fails will depend, to a large extent, on what happens in the first year - and above all, on whether you manage to get a grip on the current economic crisis.

    The Economic Crisis

    How bad is the economic outlook? Worse than almost anyone imagined.

    The economic growth of the Bush years, such as it was, was fueled by an explosion of private debt; now credit markets are in disarray, businesses and consumers are pulling back and the economy is in free-fall. What we're facing, in essence, is a yawning job gap. The U.S. economy needs to add more than a million jobs a year just to keep up with a growing population. Even before the crisis, job growth under Bush averaged only 800,000 a year - and over the past year, instead of gaining a million-plus jobs, we lost 2 million. Today we're continuing to lose jobs at the rate of a half million a month.

    There's nothing in either the data or the underlying situation to suggest that the plunge in employment will slow anytime soon, which means that by late this year we could be 10 million or more jobs short of where we should be. This, in turn, would mean an unemployment rate of more than nine percent. Add in those who aren't counted in the standard rate because they've given up looking for work, plus those forced to take part-time jobs when they want to work full-time, and we're probably looking at a real-world unemployment rate of around 15 percent - more than 20 million Americans frustrated in their efforts to find work.

    The human cost of a slump that severe would be enormous. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan research group that analyzes government programs, recently estimated the effects of a rise in the unemployment rate to nine percent - a worst-case scenario that now seems all too likely. So what will happen if unemployment rises to nine percent or more? As many as 10 million middle-class Americans would be pushed into poverty, and another 6 million would be pushed into "deep poverty," the severe deprivation that happens when your income is less than half the poverty level. Many of the Americans losing their jobs would lose their health insurance too, worsening the already grim state of U.S. health care and crowding emergency rooms with those who have nowhere else to go. Meanwhile, millions more Americans would lose their homes. State and local governments, deprived of much of their revenue, would have to cut back on even the most essential services.

    If things continue on their current trajectory, Mr. President, we will soon be facing a great national catastrophe. And it's your job - a job no other president has had to do since World War II - to head off that catastrophe.

    Wait a second, you may say. Didn't other presidents also face troubled economies? Yes, they did - but when it came to economic policy, your predecessors weren't actually running the show. For the past half century the Federal Reserve - a more or less independent institution, run by technocrats and deliberately designed to be independent of whoever happens to occupy the White House - has been taking care of day-to-day, and even year-to-year, economic management. Your fellow presidents were just along for the ride.

    Remember the economic boom of 1984, which let Ronald Reagan run on the slogan "It's morning again in America"? Well, Reagan had absolutely nothing to do with that boom. It was, instead, the work of Paul Volcker, whom Jimmy Carter appointed as chairman of the Federal Reserve Board in 1979 (and who's now the head of your economic advisory panel). First Volcker broke the back of inflation, at the cost of a recession that probably doomed Carter's re-election chances in 1980. Then Volcker engineered an economic bounce-back. In effect, Reagan dressed up in a flight suit and pretended to be a hotshot economic pilot, but Volcker was the guy who actually flew the plane and landed it safely.

    You, on the other hand, have to pull this plane out of its nose dive yourself, because the Fed has lost its mojo.

    Compare the situation right now with the one back in the 1980s, when Volcker turned the economy around. All the Fed had to do back then was print a bunch of dollars (OK, it actually credited the money to the accounts of private banks, but it amounts to the same thing) and then use those dollars to buy up U.S. government debt. This drove interest rates down: When Volcker decided that the economy needed a pick-me-up, he was quickly able to drive the interest rate on Treasury bills from 13 percent down to eight percent. Lower interest rates on government debt, in turn, quickly drove down rates on mortgages and business borrowing. People started spending again, and within a few months the economy had gone from slump to boom. Economists call this process - from the Fed's decision to print more money to the resulting pickup in spending, jobs and incomes - the "monetary transmission mechanism." And in the 1980s that mechanism worked just fine.

    This time, however, the transmission mechanism is broken.

    First of all, while the Fed can still print money, it can't drive interest rates down. Why? Because those interest rates are already about as low as they can go. As I write this letter, the interest rate on Treasury bills is 0.005 percent - that is, zero. And you can't push rates lower than that. Now, you might think that zero interest rates would lead to an orgy of borrowing. But while the U.S. government can borrow money for free, the rest of us can't. Fear rules the financial markets, so over the past year and a half, as the interest rates on government debt have plunged, the interest rates that Main Street has to pay have mostly gone up. In particular, many businesses are paying much higher interest rates now than they were a year and a half ago, before the Fed started cutting. And they're lucky compared to the many businesses that can't get credit at all.

    Besides, even if more people could borrow, would they really want to spend? There's a glut of unsold homes on the market, so there's very little incentive to build more houses, no matter how low mortgage rates go. The same goes for business investment: With office buildings standing empty, shopping malls begging for tenants and factories sitting idle, who wants to spend on new capacity? And with workers everywhere worried about job security, people trying to save a few dollars may stampede into stores that offer deep discounts, but not many people want to buy the big-ticket items, like cars, that normally fuel an economic recovery.

    So as I said, the Fed has lost its mojo. Ben Bernanke and his colleagues are trying everything they can think of to unfreeze the credit markets - the alphabet soup of new "lending facilities," with acronyms nobody can remember, is growing by the hour. Any day now, the joke goes, everyone will have a Visa card bearing the Fed logo. But at best, all this activity only serves to limit the damage. There's no realistic prospect that the Fed can pull the economy out of its nose dive.

    So it's up to you.

    Rescuing the Economy

    The last president to face a similar mess was Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and you can learn a lot from his example. That doesn't mean, however, that you should do everything FDR did. On the contrary, you have to take care to emulate his successes, but avoid repeating his mistakes.

    About those successes: The way FDR dealt with his own era's financial mess offers a very good model. Then, as now, the government had to deploy taxpayer money in order to rescue the financial system. In particular, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation initially played a role similar to that of the Bush administration's Troubled Assets Relief Program (the $700 billion program everyone knows about). Like the TARP, the RFC bulked up the cash position of troubled banks by using public funds to buy up stock in those banks.

    There was, however, a big difference between FDR's approach to taxpayer-subsidized financial rescue and that of the Bush administration: Namely, FDR wasn't shy about demanding that the public's money be used to serve the public good. By 1935 the U.S. government owned about a third of the banking system, and the Roosevelt administration used that ownership stake to insist that banks actually help the economy, pressuring them to lend out the money they were getting from Washington. Beyond that, the New Deal went out and lent a lot of money directly to businesses, to home buyers and to people who already owned homes, helping them restructure their mortgages so they could stay in their houses.

    Can you do anything like that today? Yes, you can. The Bush administration may have refused to attach any strings to the aid it has provided to financial firms, but you can change all that. If banks need federal funds to survive, provide them - but demand that the banks do their part by lending those funds out to the rest of the economy. Provide more help to homeowners. Use Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the home-lending agencies, to pass the government's low borrowing costs on to qualified home buyers. (Fannie and Freddie were seized by federal regulators in September, but the Bush administration, bizarrely, has kept their borrowing costs high by refusing to declare that their bonds are backed by the full faith and credit of the taxpayer.)

    Conservatives will accuse you of nationalizing the financial system, and some will call you a Marxist. (It happens to me all the time.) And the truth is that you will, in a way, be engaging in temporary nationalization. But that's OK: In the long run we don't want the government running financial institutions, but for now we need to do whatever it takes to get credit flowing again.

    All of this will help - but not enough. By all means you should try to fix the problems of banks and other financial institutions. But to pull the economy out of its slide, you need to go beyond funneling money to banks and other financial institutions. You need to give the real economy of work and wages a boost. In other words, you have to get job creation right - which FDR never did.

    This may sound like a strange thing to say. After all, what we remember from the 1930s is the Works Progress Administration, which at its peak employed millions of Americans building roads, schools and dams. But the New Deal's job-creation programs, while they certainly helped, were neither big enough nor sustained enough to end the Great Depression. When the economy is deeply depressed, you have to put normal concerns about budget deficits aside; FDR never managed to do that. As a result, he was too cautious: The boost he gave the economy between 1933 and 1936 was enough to get unemployment down, but not back to pre-Depression levels. And in 1937 he let the deficit worriers get to him: Even though the economy was still weak, he let himself be talked into slashing spending while raising taxes. This led to a severe recession that undid much of the progress the economy had made to that point. It took the giant public works project known as World War II - a project that finally silenced the penny pinchers - to bring the Depression to an end.

    The lesson from FDR's limited success on the employment front, then, is that you have to be really bold in your job-creation plans. Basically, businesses and consumers are cutting way back on spending, leaving the economy with a huge shortfall in demand, which will lead to a huge fall in employment - unless you stop it. To stop it, however, you have to spend enough to fill the hole left by the private sector's retrenchment.

    How much spending are we talking about? You might want to be seated before you read this. OK, here goes: "Full employment" means a jobless rate of five percent at most, and probably less. Meanwhile, we're currently on a trajectory that will push the unemployment rate to nine percent or more. Even the most optimistic estimates suggest that it takes at least $200 billion a year in government spending to cut the unemployment rate by one percentage point. Do the math: You probably have to spend $800 billion a year to achieve a full economic recovery. Anything less than $500 billion a year will be much too little to produce an economic turnaround.

    Spending on that scale, at a time when the weakening economy is driving down tax collection, will produce some really scary deficit numbers. But the consequences of too much caution - of a failure on your part to do enough to stop the economy's nose dive - will be even scarier than the coming ocean of red ink.

    In fact, the biggest problem you're going to face as you try to rescue the economy will be finding enough job-creation projects that can be started quickly. Traditional WPA-type programs - spending on roads, government buildings, ports and other infrastructure - are a very effective tool for creating employment. But America probably has less than $150 billion worth of such projects that are "shovel-ready" right now, projects that can be started in six months or less. So you'll have to be creative: You'll have to find lots of other ways to push funds into the economy.

    As much as possible, you should spend on things of lasting value, things that, like roads and bridges, will make us a richer nation. Upgrade the infrastructure behind the Internet; upgrade the electrical grid; improve information technology in the health care sector, a crucial part of any health care reform. Provide aid to state and local governments, to prevent them from cutting investment spending at precisely the wrong moment. And remember, as you do this, that all this spending does double duty: It serves the future, but it also helps in the present, by providing jobs and income to offset the slump.

    You can also do well by doing good. The Americans hit hardest by the slump - the long-term unemployed, families without health insurance - are also the Americans most likely to spend any aid they receive, and thereby help sustain the economy as a whole. So aid to the distressed - enhanced unemployment insurance, food stamps, health-insurance subsidies - is both the fair thing to do and a desirable part of your short-term economic plan.

    Even if you do all this, however, it won't be enough to offset the awesome slump in private spending. So yes, it also makes sense to cut taxes on a temporary basis. The tax cuts should go primarily to lower- and middle-income Americans - again, both because that's the fair thing to do, and because they're more likely to spend their windfall than the affluent. The tax break for working families you outlined in your campaign plan looks like a reasonable vehicle.

    But let's be clear: Tax cuts are not the tool of choice for fighting an economic slump. For one thing, they deliver less bang for the buck than infrastructure spending, because there's no guarantee that consumers will spend their tax cuts or rebates. As a result, it probably takes more than $300 billion of tax cuts, compared with $200 billion of public works, to shave a point off the unemployment rate. Furthermore, in the long run you're going to need more tax revenue, not less, to pay for health care reform. So tax cuts shouldn't be the core of your economic recovery program. They should, instead, be a way to "bulk up" your job-creation program, which otherwise won't be big enough.

    Now my honest opinion is that even with all this, you won't be able to prevent 2009 from being a very bad year. If you manage to keep the unemployment rate from going above eight percent, I'll consider that a major success. But by 2010 you should be able to have the economy on the road to recovery. What should you do to prepare for that recovery?

    Beyond the Crisis

    Crisis management is one thing, but America needs much more than that. FDR rebuilt America not just by getting us through depression and war, but by making us a more just and secure society. On one side, he created social-insurance programs, above all Social Security, that protect working Americans to this day. On the other, he oversaw the creation of a much more equal economy, creating a middle-class society that lasted for decades, until conservative economic policies ushered in the new age of inequality that prevails today. You have a chance to emulate FDR's achievements, and the ultimate judgment on your presidency will rest on whether you seize that chance.

    The biggest, most important legacy you can leave to the nation will be to give us, finally, what every other advanced nation already has: guaranteed health care for all our citizens. The current crisis has given us an object lesson in the need for universal health care, in two ways. It has highlighted the vulnerability of Americans whose health insurance is tied to jobs that can so easily disappear. And it has made it clear that our current system is bad for business, too - the Big Three automakers wouldn't be in nearly as much trouble if they weren't trying to pay the medical bills of their former employees as well as their current workers. You have a mandate for change; the economic crisis has shown just how much the system needs change. So now is the time to pass legislation establishing a system that covers everyone.

    What should this system look like? Some progressives insist that we should move immediately to a single-payer system - Medicare for all. Although this would be both the fairest and most efficient way to ensure that all Americans get the health care they need, let's be frank: Single-payer probably isn't politically achievable right now, simply because it would represent too great a change. At least at first, Americans who have good private health insurance will be reluctant to trade that insurance for a public program, even if that program will ultimately prove better.

    So the thing to do in your first year in office is pass a compromise plan - one that establishes, for the first time, the principle of universal access to care. Your campaign proposals provide the blueprint. Let people keep their private insurance if they choose, subsidize insurance for lower-income families, require that all children be covered, and give everyone the option to buy into a public plan - one that will probably end up being cheaper and better than private insurance. Pass legislation doing all that, and we'll have universal health coverage up and running by the end of your first term. And that will be an achievement that, like FDR's creation of Social Security, will permanently change America for the better.

    All this will cost money, mainly to pay for those insurance subsidies, and some people will tell you that the nation can't afford major health care reform given the costs of the economic recovery program. Let's talk about why you should ignore the naysayers.

    First, let's put the costs of the economic-recovery program in perspective. It's possible that reviving the economy might cost as much as a trillion dollars over the course of your first term. But the Bush administration wasted at least twice that much on an unnecessary war and tax cuts for the wealthiest; the recovery plan will be intense but temporary, and won't place all that much burden on future budgets. Put it this way: With long-term federal debt paying the lowest interest rates in half a century, the interest costs on a trillion dollars in new debt will amount to only $30 billion a year, about 1.2 percent of the current federal budget.

    Second, there's good reason to believe that health care reform will save money in the long run. Our system isn't just full of holes in coverage, it's also grossly inefficient, with huge bureaucratic costs - such as the immense resources that insurance companies devote to making sure they don't cover the people who need health care the most. And under a universal system it will be much easier to use our health care dollars wisely, to spend money only on medical procedures that work and not on those that don't. Since rising health care costs are the main source of the grim, long-run projections for the federal budget, the truth is that we can't afford not to move forward on health care reform.

    And let's not ignore the long-term political effects. Back in 1993, when the Clintons tried and failed to create a universal health care system, Republican strategists like William Kristol (now my colleague at The New York Times) urged their party to oppose any reform on political grounds; they argued that a successful health care program, by conveying the message that government can actually serve the public interest, would fundamentally shift American politics in a progressive direction. They were right - and the same considerations that made conservatives so opposed to health care reform should make you determined to make it happen.

    Universal health care, then, should be your biggest priority after rescuing the economy. Providing coverage for all Americans can be for your administration what Social Security was for the New Deal. But the New Deal achieved something else: It made America a middle-class society. Under FDR, America went through what labor historians call the Great Compression, a dramatic rise in wages for ordinary workers that greatly reduced income inequality. Before the Great Compression, America was a society of rich and poor; afterward it was a society in which most people, rightly, considered themselves middle class. It may be hard to match that achievement today, but you can, at least, move the country in the right direction.

    What caused the Great Compression? That's a complicated story, but one important factor was the rise of organized labor: Union membership tripled between 1935 and 1945. Unions not only negotiated better wages for their own members, they also enhanced the bargaining power of workers throughout the economy. At the time, conservatives warned that wage gains would have disastrous economic effects - that the rise of unions would cripple employment and economic growth. But in fact, the Great Compression was followed by the great postwar boom, which doubled American living standards over the course of a generation.

    Unfortunately, the Great Compression was reversed starting in the 1970s, as American workers once again lost much of their bargaining power. This loss was partly due to changes in the world economy, as major U.S. manufacturing corporations started facing more international competition. But it also had a lot to do with politics, as first the Reagan administration, then the Bush administration, did all they could to undermine the ability of workers to organize.

    You can make a start on reversing that process. Clearly, you won't be able to oversee a tripling of union membership anytime soon. But you can do a lot to enhance workers' rights. One is to start laying the groundwork to pass the Employee Free Choice Act, which would make it much harder for employers to intimidate workers who want to join a union. I know it probably won't happen in your first year, but if and when it does, the legislation will enable America to take a huge step toward recapturing the middle-class society we've lost.

    Truth & Reconciliation

    There are many other issues you'll need to deal with, of course. In particular, I haven't said a word about environmental policy, which is ultimately the most important issue of all. That's because I suspect that it won't be possible to pass a comprehensive plan for dealing with climate change in your first year. By all means, put as much environmentally friendly investment as possible - such as spending to enhance energy efficiency - into the initial recovery plan. But I'm guessing that 2009 won't be the year to introduce cap-and-trade measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. If I'm wrong, that's great - but I'm not counting on big environmental policy moves right away.

    I also haven't said anything about foreign policy. Your team is well aware of the need to wind down the war in Iraq - which is, by the way, costing about as much each year as the insurance subsidies we need to implement universal health care. You're also aware of the need to find the least bad solution for the mess in Afghanistan. And I don't even want to think about Pakistan - but you have to. Good luck.

    There is, however, one area where I feel the need to break discipline. I'm an economist, but I'm also an American citizen - and like many citizens, I spent the past eight years watching in horror as the Bush administration betrayed the nation's ideals. And I don't believe we can put those terrible years behind us unless we have a full accounting of what really happened. I know that most of the inside-the-Beltway crowd is urging you to let bygones be bygones, just as they urged Bill Clinton to let the truth about scandals from the Reagan-Bush years, in particular the Iran-Contra affair, remain hidden. But we know how that turned out: The same people who abused power in the name of national security 20 years ago returned as part of the team that, under the second George Bush, did it all over again, on a much larger scale. It was an object lesson in the truth of George Santayana's dictum: Those who refuse to learn from the past are condemned to repeat it.

    That's why this time we need a full accounting. Not a witch hunt, maybe not even prosecutions, but something like the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that helped South Africa come to terms with what happened under apartheid. We need to know how America ended up fighting a war to eliminate nonexistent weapons, how torture became a routine instrument of U.S. policy, how the Justice Department became an instrument of political persecution, how brazen corruption flourished not only in Iraq, but throughout Congress and the administration. We know that these evils were not, whatever the apologists say, the result of honest error or a few bad apples: The White House created a climate in which abuse became commonplace, and in many cases probably took the lead in instigating these abuses. But it's not enough to leave this reality in the realm of things "everybody knows" - because soon enough they'll be denied or forgotten, and the cycle of abuse will begin again. The whole sordid tale needs to be brought out into the sunlight.

    It's probably best if Congress takes the lead in investigations of the Bush years, but your administration can do its part, both by not using its influence to discourage the investigations and by bringing an end to the Bush administration's stonewalling. Let Congress have access to records and witnesses, and let the truth be told.

    That said, the future is what matters most. This month we celebrate your arrival in the White House; at a time of great national crisis, you bring the hope of a better future. It's now up to you to deliver on that hope. By enacting a recovery plan even bolder and more comprehensive than the New Deal, you can not only turn the economy around - you can put America on a path toward greater equality for generations to come.

    Respectfully,

    Paul Krugman

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Comments

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Paul Krugman is brilliant.

Paul Krugman is brilliant. Why not a position in the administration?

As long as the War on Terror

As long as the War on Terror continues I hope and pray that the economic collapse continues. The war(s) must end. It's that simple. Economic collapse may be our saviour. We are NOT an empire and need to stop pretending that we have the right to dominate other nations.

Full and complete judgment

Full and complete judgment of the criminal acts of the Bush regime. Write your congress persons now, demand it. Obama must honor the rule of law immediately or stumble across the White House threshhold in shame.

Well worth the read

Well worth the read

I agree with the contributor

I agree with the contributor above; the so called 'war on terror' must end! I too hope that the economy completely collapses if we continue to murder and torture innocent people. The Us must stop supporting the terrorist state of Israel which is committing horrendous war crimes and crimes against humanity with complete impunity!!! It has been clear to me during the eight years of criminal activity of the white house that the US would suffer simply from the 'blow back' from our illegal war on the Iraqis! This is simple wisdom: "as you sow, so shall ye reap" or in one word, KARMA. For ever action there is an equal and opposite reaction! Justice must be served and Bush and Cheney and their criminal cabal MUST BE BROUGHT TO JUSTICE!!!! The Israeli leaders must be brought to justice as well. Then the US will begin to find it's footing again and all of Paul's wise suggestions could become a reality! Without TRUTH AND JUSTICE there is no hope for America!

Ditto...but, we need Mr.

Ditto...but, we need Mr. Krugman on the outside to shed light on the vacuum we call Government. The 50 an 60 somethings should now see how the (Reagan Republicans) have actually led this country these last thirty years. Kind of makes you yearn for the good old days of tax-and-spend liberals. This time around I will talk down anyone who uses the words conservative or liberal. It's time for we the people.

Paul Krugman, thank you for

Paul Krugman, thank you for sharing your wisdom with all of us. I, too, think that you would be valuable to the Obama administration, but I am grateful that the world can have the benefit of your thoughts. You make the case for progressive actions, and you build support for the difficult choices that must be made. I hope that President Obama will be able to cut through the partisanship that has dominated our government, and that Republicans in Congress will invest some level of trust in his leadership.

A good place to start would

A good place to start would be to determine what really hit the penatgon on 9/11. The government said it was a 757, but that's not true.

Krugman's take is right on

Krugman's take is right on except for the fact the way money works in this country. This fiscal disaster was not only caused by the worst administration in history, it was also caused by how money works in this country. Until that is properly addressed, the musical chair system of money as debt will continue ad nauseum and the US Taxpayer foots the bill. No one ever asks the question What is Money? because everyone assumes they know what it is. This is not the case. Do research because knowing how money works will absolutely astound you.

As a Canadian, I find Paul

As a Canadian, I find Paul Krugman's articles enlightening and refreshing. I would like to thank Truthout for publishing his analysis which illustrates to me a person who has depth and who not only understands the issues but is able to explain them in terms for the average citizen to understand. The world would be a better place with the likes of Paul Krugman instead of belligerent narrow minded interests of the conservative crowd who represent ideological ideas from the middle ages!

Mr. Krugman: Of course these

Mr. Krugman: Of course these things listed are of some primary importance to everyone but there is one issue that MUST be resolved before all other. That issue is the restoration of the Civil Rights of all individuals, especially American citizens. Naturally i am speaking to the specific right of habeas corpus. without that protection no citizen is safe now or ever from any tyranny by any administration ever. Paul Fako

In planning ahead, we

In planning ahead, we believe that the new administration should ally itself with industry to build Enterprise Zones for the manufacturing of many goods that are now being produced outside of and imported to the United States. This will provide a growing source of new jobs, and, in addition, it will reverse the demise of the manufacturing sector in the U.S.

Give Paul Krugman a position

Give Paul Krugman a position in the administration? Hell, Paul Krugman for President!

WHAT IS THE REAL TROUBLE

WHAT IS THE REAL TROUBLE WITH OUR ECONOMY?? It is not that we cannot buy enough on credit. It is that we are buying all the wrong things. We are buying entertainment, while the professionals are saying we need to interact with each other as friends and neighbors. We are buying status symbols while we are trying to appear humble and nice. We are building athletic stadiums while our school systems fall apart. We are teaching our children by example, and telling them to do the opposite from what ewe are telling them. More money into the system will not fix these things at all.

Amen, Paul -- brilliant,

Amen, Paul -- brilliant, insightful, and as usual, correct on all accounts about the need for an economic transformation that brings public decision-making back into the economy to save it from the worse excesses of free-market capitalism; and so too for your insight that there must be an investigation of the corruption of the Bush administration and its perversion of the Constitution and citizens; rights. I have only 2 points to add: first, the corruption of the Bush administration extended deeply into the federal government's relations with private contractors, who have taken over important government functions, which need to be taken back, and this too should be the object of prosecutorial investigation (Halliburton, Blackwater, et al.). Most important: your letter should not just be to President-Elect Obama but to all Americans, labor unions and civil society groups to make sure that the Obama administration is held democratically accountable to the social justice mandate that brought it into office -- because you failed to note that if it were not for the veritable insurrection in the streets in the 1930s by labor unions and the unemployed over jobs and fair pay and social security, FDR himself would not have undertaken the Great Depression reforms you described. FDR needed massive prodding, lobbying and even protests; so too will Obama, if the US is to recover eocnomically, socially and politically from the disasters of the Bush years.

what about the military . .

what about the military . . . Sure don't need all those thousands nukes, and many of the foreign bases. But that cuts jobs. But those jobs don't "produce" anything. But they are well paying, in large part. But they are environmentally as dirty as they get. But . . . Oh, my head!

Paul Krugman is so right on

Paul Krugman is so right on all of the issues. He has a great historical perspective on the economic issues. I do hope that the Obama administration is able to move on environmental issues sooner than later.

Beautiful, Professor

Beautiful, Professor Krugman. I would add that besides bringing the troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan, AS SOON AS POSSIBLE, we should also bring our troops and shut down U.S. military bases from the 100+ countries where we have them. They are a huge drain on our resources, and only add to the ill-will of citizens of those countries where we parade in uniform. And did I mention that the U.S. defense budget is larger than all the other countries of the world COMBINED? We are NOT an empire, no matter what the neo cons may wish. A little humility would yield huge (financial) returns.

Among those infrastructure

Among those infrastructure projects, one of primary importance was left out: expanding and modernizing our railroads. When the price of gas went crazy mid-year, rail traffic was backed up. You know well the price of gas will rise again as we go through peaking. For the economy and for the environment, we need to improve our ability to transport goods and passengers in this fuel efficient way. Many make their living on the roads, so there will be displacement, there will be protest and conflict, but if we are to have a future, we should all be working on the railroads.

Ditto! Barack--you need this

Ditto! Barack--you need this guy!!

Very well said but there is

Very well said but there is more to it. The Fed is not at the end of the ropes. Just as the administration can do much more deficit spending the Fed can do much more quantitative easing. A successful combination of Keynes and Friedman is the most optimistic development to look forward to. It is imperative to clean banks from bad debt and yes, the government should take a bigger ownership stake to have a bigger upside later. When the government has more control over bad debt then loan principals and interest rates can be reduced to keep people in their homes. We should also loose the notion of taxpayers dollars and mortgaging the future of our kids. If this slum continues then our kids will have no future. Until this slump end the Fed can create as many dollars as necessary without any negative effects. To create much more dollars is actually necessary to get the economy going from the bottom up again. To have universal health care there needs to be tort reform so that the need for malpractice insurance can be eliminated. Medical procedure is always a risk and the patient should carry it, not the doctor. Then there are tax incentives for investments like cash expensing for tax purposes. Infrastructure spending is very important and then there is ENERGY. Nobody can go wrong with energy investments. The cheaper energy gets the more everybody benefits; and the less we pay to other countries the more the wealth of the nation increases. Energy investments have the greatest long term benefit and create millions of American jobs. Lets be optimistic, yes, we can!!!

Krugman appears to

Krugman appears to understand our economic mess and proposes some well thought-out solutions. He explains in layman terms. Yet I disagree with him on a commission to investigate Bush and his gang. A fantastic and thorough piece in the Jan. Harper's magazine suggested a commission to collect evidence and then appointment by a special prosecutor. I was convinced with the case they presented. In the Feb. Harper's, a letter to the editor made an even better case for beginning with the special prosecutor. We know war crimes were committed, and our blatant officials have admitted it publicly. The "commission first" argument would mean hand-picked, people, "non-partisan," in other words an ideal commission dedicated to finding truth and evidence. Forget that. Get a special prosecutor on it NOW, Jan. 21st. Too many questions exist if the Bush Admin. crimes are not addressed. What will Obama do with all of that Executive power? What about Habeus Corpus and foreign policy? Do we trust he will right it all? He has already changed direction on universal healthcare and he isn't in office yet. My prayer is that he is saying that he wants to look forward, not backward, is not a signal he will let the obscenities of the last 8 years go, but that he is saying that because he is not yet president. It will be interesting to watch. Nondeplume

I agree with Paul Krugman on

I agree with Paul Krugman on mostly every point except : "...Not a witch hunt, maybe not even prosecutions..." Yes, we need to PROSECUTE ! And to the fullest extent of the law. The higher the person on the food chain , the greater their responsibility, the greater their prison time and financial fines must be. As an example of how many HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS of USD have been HIDDEN in offshore accounts by the banks that are STEALING our US Taxpayers' Dollars, see the full article below. Start with the White House, the Cheyneys, the Cabinet, the Senators, the Congresspeople, Wall Street, the Industrials... the Agency Directors... get them all relentlessly, offer plea-bargains for real "tell-alls"... but NO ONE walks free. Everyone pays money and everyone does time. Pursue them to their hide-aways in the Middle-East tax havens who promised them "no-extradition". Get the Haliburtons, Blackwaters, etc. They terrorized us. Make America proud that we GET OUR home-grown terrorists, even if they were "selected-never-elected." http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/16/over-8-in-10-corporations_n_158693.html Bailed-Out Firms Use Tax Havens KEN THOMAS | January 16, 2009 09:34 PM EST | WASHINGTON — Eighty-three of the nation's 100 largest corporations, including Citigroup, Bank of America and News Corp., had subsidiaries in offshore tax havens in 2007, and some of the companies received federal bailout funding, a government watchdog said Friday. The Government Accountability Office released a report that said Bank of America Inc., Citigroup Inc. and Morgan Stanley all had more than 100 units in countries that maintain low or no taxes. The three financial institutions were included in the $700 billion financial bailout approved by Congress... READ MORE at the link above.

First Truth, then

First Truth, then Reconciliation. Exactly right! What Desmond Tutu said and did in South Africa, we badly need right here in America. We can do it. It's not Obama's job, it's ours. All he needs to do is to let it be done. I hope he will open the record books, and abolish "national security" as an all-occasions excuse to avoid transparency. Apparently there are already some Obama moves in that direction. Hope is flourishing at the moment!

I agree with all that Dr.

I agree with all that Dr. Krugman puts forth. But, I am a die hard Progressive, who dislikes admitting that, including all that Dr. Krugman states, I think it's important to add that World War II was a huge part of the Depression Era coming to an end. From what I've read, and maybe it's not accurate, FDR's programs weren't making as great an impact as was necessary and that the War, with all its' necessary requirements, brought the Depression to an end. Also, I feel that the Clinton years, were left out of this analysis. It seems most of the negatives that began with the Reagan era, continued on a downward slide, with NAFTA, along with the continued merging of mulinational corporations and banks. This makes it highly difficult to maintain a balanced economy when, if giants fall -- rather than many small companies/banks being able to absorb the fall of one of their equals, it becomes a gigantic obstacle, requiring exorbitant help from the outside/government. Also during Clinton's years (of course at once hampered re possible positives and aided toward negatives, by the Gingrich gang), the continued closing of factories, companies moving to poor countries with subliveable wages, the growth of the interdependence of China with the US via Walmart et. al. and all that resulted, took a giant leap forward, as it has continued these last 8 years. Of course, the Bushites, completely stomped our country into the ground with it's internal, deregulations/free wheeling, greed, and the tremendous costs of an unwarranted, illegal war that didn't do for the larger country what WWII did, though we know "some" are profiting. Just needed to add my 2 cents. Thanks for the opportunity.

At the risk of sounding

At the risk of sounding idealistic, I would also like to see us create jobs and make things that are not just crap. We need improvements to railroads and infrastructure, energy independence, better education for our children. We need cheaper college tuition. We need to curtail the idea of "planned obsolescence" so we make things that last. Otherwise, the new jobs are just creating more waste and stupidity. What is the point of a job that involves sending out spam? Distributing junk mail? Why do we need a new cell phone every year? I'd like to see our culture rise along with our economy.

Krugman could never be

Krugman could never be elected since he's not telegenic and you can't boil this all down to a thirty second sound bite. How many republican voters would have made it past paragraph one of this article? They'll just wait for Rush to summarize it for them and then call us all communists. And then on to Katie Couric for a he-said/she-said recap with no in--depth analysis. Start breaking up the media conglomerates on day one. He who controls our information controls us.

Citing anonymous "I think

Citing anonymous "I think it's important to add that World War II was a huge part of the Depression Era coming to an end. From what I've read, and maybe it's not accurate, FDR's programs weren't making as great an impact as was necessary and that the War, with all its' necessary requirements, brought the Depression to an end." Paul makes this point pretty clear in this letter ands warns Obama not to make the same mistake. Maybe you need to re-read it. "When the economy is deeply depressed, you have to put normal concerns about budget deficits aside; FDR never managed to do that. As a result, he was too cautious: The boost he gave the economy between 1933 and 1936 was enough to get unemployment down, but not back to pre-Depression levels. And in 1937 he let the deficit worriers get to him: Even though the economy was still weak, he let himself be talked into slashing spending while raising taxes. This led to a severe recession that undid much of the progress the economy had made to that point. It took the giant public works project known as World War II - a project that finally silenced the penny pinchers - to bring the Depression to an end."

We are an empire. More than

We are an empire. More than one poster has stated the US is not an empire, but I respectfully submit that it is, the facts show it is, and the US has been actively assembling it at least since the Spanish-American War. We have one thousand (give or take if you include the secret ones) bases around the world that work to control the natural and human resources of other countries, often by coercive and violent means. The profits realized by this huge accumulation of power accrue to the wealthy while the breathtakingly huge expenses are paid by the rest of us. Think of the military budget as a subsidy for corporations and the monetary elite that own and run them. Does anyone doubt that the Iraq war was joined to create a business opportunity for US multinational oil companies? It's true we don't install US administrators in our proprietary colonies but we don't need to, we just cut some resident thug in on the deal (such as Batista, Trujillo, Somoza, Papa Doc, the Shah Reza Pahlavi, Pinochet, etc.) and pretend they act independently when in reality we arm them, train their paramilitary, provide them with logistics and even lists of "dissidents" (read nationalist patriot troublemakers) to assassinate. Look at our record in Cuba, Iran, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Korea, Viet Nam, a history of suppression of nationalist and often democratic movements. Yes, we are an empire, the problem we face is how to divest ourselves of it and become a "nation among nations".

I just love to argue with

I just love to argue with conservatives who say FDR's New Deal was a bust and WWII was what really ended the depression, not a federal spending program. It's true that WWII put the final nail in the coffin of the depression, but guess what? A war is a federal spending program. It just has a psychological advantage in that you don't really have to sell it to the masses. Everybody gets behind it. That's what sucks about our right wing whackos, just by demonizing this plan they help destroy the chance for success.

I think we need to shrink

I think we need to shrink the economy by not building all the things that harm us ,at the same time we start to build the things that we need. Take 15,000 toxic chemicals off the shelves, stop building bombers and tanks even as we build windmills and electric railroads. What also is missed in all these discussions is the need to actually heal ecosystems. We still depend upon soil, fish, forests, and if those continue to fail due to over exploitation, the froth of further financial scams may register as growth, but also as inequality. In addition the speeding up of the depletion of mineral resources is going to be very difficult, and ultimately foolish. I do agree with Krugman, national health care saves us money.

I am a Constitutional

I am a Constitutional constructionist and fiscal conservative, but to the Congress and the Obama Administration regarding Dr. Krugman's proposals: Full speed ahead!

I couldn't agree with Paul

I couldn't agree with Paul Krugman more. I would have to say that a truth and reconciliation 'trial' is necessary, but should be used as a final solution, if you will. I believe Obama has a lot of leverage right now, if he uses it correctly, to bring Bush/Cheney to account for their crimes. Let's have the investigations, indictments, and prosecutions, and then get these two to stand in front of the American people and admit their crimes. Then as part of their reconciliation, they can be sent off to one of those islands captured from the Japanese and kept as US territories after World War Two in the Pacific. A permanent vacation to some atoll off Guam would put them out of harm's way, and they wouldn't be around anymore to harm America in the future should another Bush gain power, or some other Repugnantcan troll like Palin. Elliot Abrams, Paul Wolfowitz, Donald Rumsfeld, Richard Pearle, Scooter Libby, Andrew Card, Karl Rove: the whole lot should be sent off too for the remainder of their lives!

I have relied on Mr.

I have relied on Mr. Krugman's articles in the NY Times for some time now to explain to me economic theory and practicality in an accessible vernacular. What I would like to know is why John Kenneth Galbraith and his implicit inclusion of greed in discussions of economics (i.e. the need for countervaling pressures in a capitalist economic model) hasn't made it more to the fore?

Well put! We need to right

Well put! We need to right the wrongs of the last 8 years. We need to get rid of the Patriot bill, reverse all Bush's signing statements, restore the Constitution, reverse how Corporations have the same rights as individuals, and put forth a Privacy Bill for all Americans. Corporations need to pay their share of the taxes with no loop holes. Charge rent on air waves and public lands. Hire millions of inspectors to check food, medication, toys, products, etc. that come into this country and if toxic or tainted send them back. Encourage companies to again make those products on American soil Forgive all education loans that people can not afford to pay. Let doctors, nurses, and teachers have free education and hire them across the nation for the people. This will increase jobs and fill the need in schools and clinics. Stop credit card companies and Banks from 'Loan Sharking credit rates'. Imagine, the banks borrow money for zero percent and loan it out with rates as high as 30%. Are these the same banks that got billions in the bailout from public funds? Let all those who are still working redo their mortgages and be able to keep their homes. Stop all foreign aid and reconsider future requests honestly. Close military bases and have other governments share the cost of their own security. Stop all the private contracting in the military and government. They have looted the treasury and made a mess that is felt all over the world. For the people create single payer health care and fix social security. Take the cap off and have all pay at the same percent. The government has been using this for the general treasury for years. With people's savings and investments gone they are counting on this for retirement. Finally, put those responsible in jail.We need to know the truth and have it exposed to the world.I know this is a long list but it is a start to correct the wrongs of the last eight years.

Barack, Mr. Krugman

Barack, Mr. Krugman presents a sound, smart, right-on and wise case. It will definitely be harder to do than to conceive and write about as Krugman knows.But with collective vision, commitment, cooperation, integrity and courage to stand up against the naysayers, fear mongers and the " status quo" self appointed, arrogant, greedy social-economic gatekeeprs who see no international boundaries and lack humanity, we can begin to set things in the right direction by following this Krugman recipe. Let's have the courage to listen to our collective inner wisdom and not bow down any more. "Give ua liberty or give us death (Henry, P) and all are created equal with certain inalienable rights- not just a few who can buy it. None are above the law, none. And yes,Now is the time. We are the answer, Barack. you know this be strong and God Bless you and all of us who care enough to act. Namaste

Going after Bush/Cheney for

Going after Bush/Cheney for corruption and abuse of office would appease vengeance seekers (which is a very base motive), but could easily fail. Taken to court, these immensely complicated processes could drag on endlessly, until political fatigue sets in and everyone loses interest. A major problem would be with obtaining legally unassailable evidence given the likelihood that most of it has already been shredded, and the fact that interpreting much of what happened turns on a legally murky understanding of executive mandate in a ‘war-like’ situation. Rather than a trial, President Obama might do better to appoint an ad hoc tribunal of ‘bipartisan’ legal-moral experts (law and philosophy professors, clergy and spiritual leaders, political analysts) to look at abuses of power and office under the Bush/Cheney administration. The tribunal would have no powers, and would thus not be constrained by the strictures of legal procedure. It would only be asked to establish a credible account of what happened, and to provide careful analysis and expert judgment on the Bush/Cheney administration’s possible damages to the executive, to governance and to America’s capacity to support democratic leadership world-wide. A great many of us would like to see Dick Cheney’s ass fry (as indeed it will in Hades), but far, far more important is, as Prof Krugman rightly notes, to get the bottom of how America’s highest office bearers could slide so easily into criminal and immoral behavior.

I agree with one of the

I agree with one of the commenters above. The basic premise of contemporary American politics is that it has the right to act like a police state around the world, bullying, bombing, and torturing other nations into accepting "freedom and 'democracy." This has got to end, and end now, before we enter Afghanistan! Like the toy store's motto, in case it has not become apparent yet, "terror is us." Should this realization not take hold soon, Obama will begin another useless war in Afghanistan, which will pump up and feed the military industrial complex and the consciousness it represents. So until we "get over" our sick superiority complex and start on a path of sane economic socialism and Mind Your Own Business foreign policy, we are doomed and will forever be doomed - and so should we remain doomed. As Rev. Wright spoke it so concisely, "God Damn America!" Under Bush, and Clinton before him, under neo-liberal economics, America has flourished as a land of violence and selfishness. It must clean itself up before any good will come to it.

Krugman charts the economic

Krugman charts the economic mess we find ourselves in after 8 years of Bushism and, in nontechnical terms (except for the highly technical, "mojo") offers a neoKeynesian way out. It is understandable that even in a long article as this, it is too daunting a task to consider the need to re-engineer the financial and economic systems rather than merely give them massive shots in the arm till the next crash. When the US used to be the top creditor nation, it had a formidable industrial base, producing top quality products for both the domestic and export markets, whereas our current position as the top exporter of military hardware (and the wars to go with it) and raw agricultural products, coincides with our becoming the biggest debtor nation. Truth and reconciliation, but no prosecution? Why? In any case that should be carried out by a nonpartisan commission, given Democrat acquiescence in the Bush legacy. A constitutional commission could examine: * How to more firmly establish the principle of executive accountability to representatives of the people, end Cheneyesque stonewalling and repeal the extraconstitutional legislative legacy of the Bush era. * How to democratize our foreign policy and take it out of the black box of executive prerogative and the influence of special interest, The most grotesque result of which, we see in the near unanimous Congressional support for Israeli butchery in Lebanon and Gaza.

As he often does, Paul

As he often does, Paul Krugman succintly states the problem and offers recommendations. Well, here's one that is cheaper than buying toxic assets, which have not been clearly identified. Let's take care of the personal debt problem first. Let's give every adult US citizen $1 million dollars and every child $250K, with half of that invested in an educational fund. By doing so, most individuals can take care of their own personal debts and save their homes. It stabilizes local economies and will probably promote innovation. Most importantly, it's cheaper than any solution that the "experts" have proposed so far.

What Dr. Krugman failed to

What Dr. Krugman failed to say explicitly is that the situation we are in is the result of a global class war waged by the wealthy elite of this country in conjunction with the elites in other countries. Furthermore, he failed to say that we do not make anything anymore in this country, which means that the only thing being produced for the past 20 years was fake paper on Wall Street. Finally, we are an empire in decline, and the sooner the people in this country understand that reality, the better chance we have to live in peace with others, and save the planet from the rapidly growing climate crisis. Why not have a Marshall Plan for greening our entire economy for starters, as Barack starts the new federal employment program.

Our noble economist gets a

Our noble economist gets a C- for keeping his busy soon-to-be Chief executive reader (and us) mystified until half way through the article, and he then tells us that economics is at the heart of our problems. I'm sorry, economics is an instrument of policy, often summoned to justify flawed reasoning, not a fundamental principle. His suggestion of creating jobs by building roads and bridges is not "Obama for Change." It is preserving the status quo (the failing automotive industry that is totally dependent on oil which is beginning its steep and inexorable decline). He hopes climate change can wait. This man needs to pass a course in high school physics before he can pontificate on my behalf.

This is a great piece. Just

This is a great piece. Just two comments: First, FDR's New Deal programs certainly did not create the middle class that emerged in the aftermath of WWII. New Deal policies may have set the stage for what occurred, but it was War spending that got us out of the Depression and formed the basis for the middle class society that emerged after 1945 and lasted until the mid-1970s. Second, any serious investigation of the illicit activities of the Bush/Cheney regime must begin with a thorough recounting of exactly what really occurred on Sept. 11, 2001. Virtually everything these crooks did flowed from that event; they probably could not have easily started two wars and bankrupted the country had 9/11 not happened. I do not believe we have the full story, not by a long shot.

Anonymous 15:07: not only

Anonymous 15:07: not only brilliant, but Nobel Prize winner, articulate, literate, preternaturally clear, properly respectful, and bearded. But he lacks the essential qualification shared by the Clintonistas Big O has surrounded himself with: his nose ain't in the butts of the rich.

Krugman offers much of what

Krugman offers much of what must be done to restore the devastated economy and build the foundation of a sound future structure. But the most important thing FDR did was to establish, for the first time, a rational regulatory regime that would have (if the Reaganites, the Clintonites, and finally the Bushites had not emasculated it) PREVENTED the recent financial bubbles and economic debacles. What now MUST be done is to RESTORE such comprehensive regulation, modernized to include every conceivable derivative financial instument that could be created to avoid necessary limitations on unfettered speculation. The financial institutions and structures MUST be prevented from growing "too large to fail" or else when they inevitably do fail and become too large to EXIST, the resources of government and the taxpayer will be unable to responsibly respond in a timely manner.

Krugman provided the best

Krugman provided the best appraisal to date of the current situation and all that needs to be done to correct the damage done not just during the past 8 years under Bush to the country as a whole, but the damage done by conservatives in Congress along with Reagan, Bush I, and Clinton, to damage the American working class which really drives the economy. It is the workers who are not only the consumers, the role upon which all the attention is focused, but also the real producers and not the financial schemers and charlatans of Wall Street. Paul Krugman is correct to assert that strong unions are good for the economy, despite the claims of corporate flacks and sycophants to the contrary.

The Truth and Reconciliation

The Truth and Reconciliation model could ensure that America and the world knows what happened under Bush without distracting Obama's administration from its overwhelming to do list. Obama has strongly signaled his disinclination to spend his first administration mired in the recent dark past. This approach has a certain wisdom, given the unprecedented challenges he faces. TRC offers a middle ground that would still have consequences. Being identified to the world as a bad actor is a consequence. And, as I recall, the South African reconciliation process gave amnesty only to those who truthfully confessed their wrongs. Perhaps a special prosecutor could deal with those who won't confess or who don't tell the truth. For better or for worse, Obama's stance as a conciliator is inconsistent with his throwing the book at Bush. They just had lunch together! So I think Dr. Krugman is right here.

there is an interesting

there is an interesting piece on the Energy Bulletin by Jerry Silberman called, "What strategy for a green Recovery" Did we read the same plan? Apollo, Obama and the Real Deal. I suggest you read this launch it on your site for it gives information that Paul leaves out and asks key questions as to how this Alliance is supposed to work and what it does not do. climate change will not be stopped on energy efficiency alone. "Those of us who understand limitations of resources and technology and the danger to our future from t he consequence of fossil fuel consumption are very worried about the direction and the amount of money being spent that will not be successful nor has any chance of being successful. the Real Deal from the Post Carbon Institute in contrast to Obama's and Schneider's paean plan"... is the way to go and the course must be driven in that direction. Or Obama will not be successful in two terms and we would have lost our chance to save humanity. While I agree with Paul Krugman, this i s just an outline that leaves out another segment crucial to make a real deal change.

Thanks for

Thanks for sharing... Regards, Back Office services

IGNORING THE REAL PROBLEM -

IGNORING THE REAL PROBLEM - MONEY AS DEBT Mr. Krugman lived up to his NOBEL status in style. He didn't suggest the US treasury print it's own money interest free as the Constitution permits instead of borrowing the money supply at interest from the investment bankers who own the FED (and are bailing themselves out at taxpayers expense). That would save $100 billion a year in interest payments alone even before the recent bailout swindle. He didn't point out that the Fed contracted the money supply during the great depression in order to make it "great" for the investment bankers who managed to pull their money out of the market just at the right time and consolidate their power and increase their wealth by buying up bankrupt companies for pennies on the dollar years later. He didn't alert the public to the economic slavery that their fiat money system creates by design. Fractional banking and inflation gradually eating away their life's savings. He didn't point out the Financial Modernization Act of 2000 was the genie out of the bottle that allowed sub-prime securitization, credit default swaps and 56 Trillion in derivative side bets to collapse the US economy right on cue. He didn't point out that the architects of the FMA legislation are the same criminals now overseeing the "collapse", Bernanke and Paulson (Goldman Sachs CEO) and the last Democratic hero Bill Clinton used his fast track power to make it happen. He didn't alert readers to the Amero, the 2012 single currency for the North American Union and the reason why the global collapse is being orchestrated now. He is a smooth salesman for the banksters and it's business as usual with a new front man in the White House. Don't THINK WHY WE GOT FLEECED just HOPE for CHANGE. No impeachment of Bush, Cheney et al for war crimes. No abolishing the Fed responsible for the boom and bust manipulation of the money supply and interest rates. Just economic slavery or our grandchildren. The game is rigged but nobody seems to notice.

recirculation fee not

recirculation fee not interest rates. Silvio Gessell, check him out. Interest allows hoarding. Getting credit flowing only allows people to spend what they don't have, which at some point comes due. Build more houses, bring down the price of home ownership, better wages as a way to get ahead not buying and selling houses. Pump more oil, make it more affordable and use it up, thatll bring some change. This monetary system is obsolete it doesn't equate to "fair trade" . my time for your time not fat cats gettin' fatter off our sweat.viva la rasa.