Uscire dalla crisi finanziaria statunitense: la politica domina l’economia nella Nuova Economia Politica

Most economists expected that the “Great Recession” produced by the financial meltdown of 2008 would usher in a resurgence of traditional Keynesian economics and a decline of what has come to be called “market fundamentalism”. By contrast, also due to the inadequate size of the 2009 stimulus package...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: JAN KREGEL
Format: Article
Language:Italian
Published: Associazione Economia civile 2011-01-01
Series:Moneta e Credito
Subjects:
USA
Online Access:http://ojs.uniroma1.it/index.php/monetaecredito/article/view/9501/9396
Description
Summary:Most economists expected that the “Great Recession” produced by the financial meltdown of 2008 would usher in a resurgence of traditional Keynesian economics and a decline of what has come to be called “market fundamentalism”. By contrast, also due to the inadequate size of the 2009 stimulus package, the resurgence of support for Keynesian expenditure policies has been extremely short lived. However, the negative popular and political reaction should not have come as a surprise, at least for three reasons: the design of the Obama stimulus plan and its difference from the expenditure policies of the Roosevelt Administration; the political environment that has eviscerated fiscal policy and placed monetary policy at the centre of economic policy and produced “debt driven” growth; the difference between policies appropriate to treating an income deflation and a debt deflation.
ISSN:0026-9611
2037-3651