Lessons from the euro crisis for the United States
Desmond Lachman
AEI Economic Perspectives, 2012
Abstract:
As the European economy slides ever deeper into recession, it is time for the United States to draw cautionary lessons from Europe's painful budget adjustment experience, especially as the dismal state of America's public finances now bears an uncomfortably striking resemblance to that of some of Europe's more troubled economies. Among the more important lessons is that the United States should not be lulled into a false sense of budget complacency by the very-low interest rates at which its government can presently fund itself. Rather, the United States should embark upon a serious program of medium-term budget adjustment if it is to avoid going further down the path to fiscal ruin. The European experience also suggests that medium-term fiscal consolidation is best effected through public spending cuts rather than tax increases, and that such an adjustment effort should be supported by accommodative monetary policy action.
Keywords: federal budget; deficit; AEI Economic Perspectives; european economics; EU debt crisis; Greek Debt; Policy Papers; What to Do: Policy Recommendations on International Economics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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