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Economics in the Crisis

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  • Paul Krugman

Abstract

To say the obvious: we’re now in the fourth year of a truly nightmarish economic crisis. I like to think that I was more prepared than most for the possibility that such a thing might happen; developments in Asia in the late 1990s badly shook my faith in the widely accepted proposition that events like those of the 1930s could never happen again. But even pessimists like me, even those who realized that the age of bank runs and liquidity traps was not yet over, failed to realize how bad a crisis was waiting to happen – and how grossly inadequate the policy response would be when it did happen. And the inadequacy of policy is something that should bother economists greatly – indeed, it should make them ashamed of their profession, which is certainly how I feel. For times of crisis are when economists are most needed. If they cannot get their advice accepted in the clinch – or, worse yet, if they have no useful advice to offer – the whole enterprise of economic scholarship has failed in its most essential duty. And that is, of course, what has just happened. In what follows I will talk first about the general role of economics in times of crisis. Then I’ll turn to the specifics of the role economics should have been playing these past few years, and the reasons why it has for the most part not played this role. At the end I’ll talk about what might make things better the next time around.

Suggested Citation

  • Paul Krugman, 2013. "Economics in the Crisis," Notas Económicas, Faculty of Economics, University of Coimbra, issue 37, pages 11-22, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:gmf:journl:y:2013:i:37:p:11-22
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    Cited by:

    1. Nicola Acocella & Paolo Pasimeni, 2018. "The "uncovered inflation rate parity" condition in a monetary union," FMM Working Paper 28-2018, IMK at the Hans Boeckler Foundation, Macroeconomic Policy Institute.
    2. Dennis Novy & Alan M. Taylor, 2020. "Trade and Uncertainty," The Review of Economics and Statistics, MIT Press, vol. 102(4), pages 749-765, October.
    3. -, 2016. "Latin America and the Caribbean: Challenges, dilemmas and commitments of a common urban agenda. Executive summary," Coediciones, Naciones Unidas Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL), number 40657 edited by Eclac.
    4. Paolo Pini, 2013. "What Europe Needs to Be European," Economia politica, Società editrice il Mulino, issue 1, pages 3-12.
    5. Solovyov Vladimir Nikolaevich & Stratiychuk Igor O., 2013. "Use of precursor indicators of crisis phenomena of the financial market on the basis of the scale-dependent Lyapunov exponent," The Problems of Economy, RESEARCH CENTRE FOR INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT PROBLEMS of NAS (KHARKIV, UKRAINE), issue 2, pages 279-283.

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