Krugman: Think Beyond Stimulus to New Economy
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Once the nation’s economy begins to recover; we should build a durable and broadly shared prosperity. That was the message Nobel laureate Paul Krugman brought today to the first in a series of conferences on progressive ideas to turn around the economy.
Speaking to more than 800 participants at the Thinking Big/Thinking Forward conference in Washington, D.C., Krugman said that to prevent the nation’s economic pit from becoming a permanent trench, we will need a combination of fiscal and financial policies. And that will require the government to invest in the economy in a big way to spur demand.
Krugman, who won the Nobel Prize in economics in 2008, disputed Republican claims that the best way to stimulate the economy is through tax cuts.
There’s more bang for the buck from government spending than from tax cuts.
More Unemployed Workers, Fewer Jobs

The U.S. retail sector has been the most immune to the nation’s year-long jobs free fall, but that has changed in recent months and likely will get much worse. Today’s Commerce Department report on retail sales in December, the period when most retailers make a large chunk of their earnings, are bleak: Sales were down 9.8 percent in December from December 2007. These figures mean many stores will be closed and entire chains going bankrupt—and many more U.S. workers will lose their jobs.
Already, there now are four unemployed workers for every job opening, according to the Economic Policy Institute (EPI). The nonprofit group also reports a 90 percent growth of involuntary part-time workers over the past year, with some 8 million U.S. workers forced to settle for fewer hours. Such workers are not counted in the official monthly Labor Department unemployment data, meaning the official U.S. unemployment of 7.2 percent is more like 13.5 percent when underemployed or workers too discouraged to look for work are counted.












