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OpEdNews Op Eds    H3'ed 12/24/10

AUSTERITY FAILS IN EUROLAND: TIME FOR SOME "DEFICIT EASING"

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Ellen Brown
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The European authorities could . . . allow for Ireland to undertake a temporary fiscal stimulus to get their economy growing again. That is the most feasible, practical alternative to continued recession.

 

Instead, the European authorities are trying what the IMF . . . calls an "internal devaluation". This is a process of shrinking the economy and creating so much unemployment that wages fall dramatically, and the Irish economy becomes more competitive internationally on the basis of lower unit labour costs. . . .

 

Aside from huge social costs and economic waste involved in such a strategy, it's tough to think of examples where it has actually worked. . . .

 

If you want to see how rightwing and 19th-century-brutal the European authorities are being, just compare them to Ben Bernanke, the Republican chair of the US Federal Reserve. He recently initiated a second round of "quantitative easing", or creating money -" another $600bn dollars over the next six months. And . . . he made it clear   that the purpose of such money creation was so that the federal government could use it for another round of fiscal stimulus. The ECB could do something similar -- if not for its rightist ideology and politics.

 

Deficit Easing

 

For Ireland, Douthwaite recommends a modified form of quantitative easing he calls "deficit easing."   He explains:

 

Both approaches involve central banks creating money. With quantitative easing, the new money is generally used to buy securities from the banking system, thus providing the banks with more money to lend. Unfortunately that is where problems have been arising in the US and the UK. Because the public has been unwilling to borrow, or the banks have been unwilling to lend, quantitative easing has not increased the supply of money in circulation in the US, where M3 began to decline in the second half of 2009 and was still falling a year later. . . .

 

Deficit-easing avoids this "won't-borrow-won't-lend' bottleneck by giving the new

money to governments to spend into use, or to pass on to their citizens to reduce their

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Ellen Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public Banking Institute, and author of twelve books including the best-selling WEB OF DEBT. In THE PUBLIC BANK SOLUTION, her latest book, she explores successful public banking models historically and (more...)
 

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