CAMBRIDGE – Like most people who create an “ism,” John Maynard Keynes quickly found his followers running ahead of him. “You are more Keynesian than I am,” he once told a young American economist. Now it is the turn of his biographer, Robert Skidelsky, to become distinctly more Keynesian than Keynes.
Keynes was not averse to changing his mind. But, as far I am aware, he did not change his predictions after the fact. This does not seem to be the case for Skidelsky.
In November 2010, Skidelsky described British Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne as a “menace to the future of the economy,” whose policies “doomed” the United Kingdom to “years of interminable recession.” In July 2011, he declared that Osborne was making a “wasteland.”
None of this happened; the honest thing to do would be to admit that. But, in pseudo-science, you never acknowledge that a prediction was wrong and thus that the model might be defective. So now Skidelsky retrospectively “predicts” something quite different: “that the start of austerity aborted the recovery in 2010; that recovery would have come sooner if the pre-austerity level of public spending had been maintained; [and] that it was the reduction of austerity in 2012 that enabled the economy to expand again.” With a flourish, he concludes: “The facts are consistent with Keynesian theory. Keynesians said austerity would cut output growth. Output growth fell.”
Yet even Skidelsky admits that he and his fellow Keynesians “cannot prove” this. Indeed, nothing in Keynes’ theory would allow such simplistic causal inferences. After all, other forces were at work after 2010 – not least the eurozone crisis (which some non-Keynesians, including me, actually predicted before it happened).
Nor would Keynes have been as confident as Skidelsky that the counterfactual of continued high deficits would have been without risk or cost. Historical experience – including in the United Kingdom in the 1970s – tells us that financial markets are not always convinced by heavily indebted governments that promise to solve their problems by borrowing even more.
Responding to some early critics of his General Theory, Keynes showed that he recognized the importance of uncertainty in economic life, and consequently the difficulty of making predictions. “The whole object of the accumulation of wealth,” he wrote, “is to produce results, or potential results, at a comparatively distant, and sometimes at an indefinitely distant, date.”
But, Keynes continued, “our knowledge of the future is fluctuating, vague, and uncertain.” There are simply too many things – from the “prospect of a European war” to the “price of copper and the interest rate 20 years hence” – about which “there is no scientific basis on which to form any calculable probability whatever.”
There was much that we did not know in 2010. We did not know if the UK’s banking crisis was over; if its very large fiscal deficit (amounting to nearly 12% of GDP) was sustainable; or what the interest rate would be in two years, much less 20. The situation was so grave that no responsible politician favored the type of policies that Skidelsky argues should have been adopted.
In fact, at that point, the only real difference between the approach of the Labour government’s chancellor of the exchequer, Alistair Darling, and that of Osborne consisted – as is clear from Darling’s last budget statement – in the timing of austerity. In March 2010, Darling vowed to reduce the deficit to 5.2% of GDP by 2013-2014. Under his Conservative successor, the actual deficit in that year was 5.9%.
Skidelsky argues that “austerity hit the economy, and by hitting the economy, it worsened the fiscal balance.” But that presupposes what he cannot prove: that a larger deficit could have been run without any costs.
All Skidelsky can offer as evidence to support this supposition is the view of the bond markets: “Long-term nominal and real interest rates were already very low before Osborne became chancellor, and they stayed low afterwards.” But, if it were true that “austerity worsened the fiscal balance,” the markets should have punished Osborne. They did not.
Likewise, if it was true that higher deficits carried no risks, but brought increased benefits, then the Financial Times would have been full of articles by investment-bank economists saying just that. It was not.
To be sure, I must acknowledge that I erred in one respect, which I am grateful to Skidelsky for pointing out. In May, I wrote that “at no point after May 2010 did [business confidence] sink back to where it had been throughout the past two years of Gordon Brown’s catastrophic premiership.” As Skidelsky rightly pointed out, confidence recovered from its low point in the first quarter of 2009, and reached a plateau in the first half of 2010. So I should have written: “At no point after May 2010 did it sink back to its nadir during Gordon Brown’s catastrophic premiership.”
But that does not alter my point that the more Paul Krugman talked about the “confidence fairy” – a term he coined after Osborne became Chancellor to ridicule anyone who argued for fiscal restraint – the more business confidence recovered in the UK. Although confidence fell somewhat in the first two years under Prime Minister David Cameron, it never approached the low point of the Brown period, and it later recovered.
Nowadays, some economists seem to believe that pointing out a single factual error (out of more than 20 statements of fact) invalidates an entire argument. But, while it may cause a flutter on Twitter, that is not the way serious intellectual debate works.
Similarly, Skidelsky cannot prove that austerity was responsible for the dip in confidence. The eurozone crisis is a more likely culprit. After all, Darling had promised his own version of austerity in March 2010.
Skidelsky attempts to salvage his and Krugman’s claim that the UK’s economic performance since 2010 was somehow worse than its performance during the Great Depression, writing that “real per capita GDP has taken longer to recover this time around.” But a serious student of the Depression – which Skidelsky used to be – knows that, compared to the 1920s, the UK had a relatively smooth ride in the 1930s, not least because abandoning the gold standard in 1931 allowed for monetary-policy easing. In any case, unemployment was far higher in the 1930s than in the 2010s. And that is the measure that should matter to Keynesians.
To muddy the waters, Skidelsky cites work by David Bell and David Blanchflower on “underemployment.” He also raises the issue of productivity, referring to research by the Trades Union Congress. But at no point in this discussion have I made any claims about the quality of the jobs created in the UK since 2010, or about the productivity of workers.
As a general rule, union leaders would rather see their members in “good” jobs, even if that means unemployment for others. My view is that employment, even in low-paid or part-time jobs, is better than unemployment. Were he alive today, I think Keynes would agree.
Nevertheless, I am glad to see that Skidelsky (unlike Krugman) acknowledges the need for supply-side reforms “to improve skills, infrastructure, and access to finance,” and concedes that he and his fellow Keynesians “have been slow to understand that a government cannot increase the national debt without limit for a cause in which most people do not believe.” He may be beginning to see the light.
Given the way Keynesianism came to be associated with inflationary fiscal and monetary policies in the 1970s, it is easy to forget what a hawk Keynes was in his final years. The whole point of his 1940 pamphlet How to Pay for the War was that higher taxes were needed to avoid the kind of inflation Britain had experienced during World War I. Toward the end of World War II, he fretted about the high level of military spending, and was depressed by the loss of power that came with Britain’s large external debts.
How do I know all this? Because I read it in the third volume of Skidelsky’s masterful biography of Keynes. Perhaps, before firing any more salvos at a fellow historian, its author should re-read his own book. It might make him a bit less Keynesian.
Comments
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Comment Commented Rajendran Vasudevan
I am sure there is a difference between an "economist" and some one who has read a few articles here and there and then formed an opinion!! ?? Read more
Comment Commented Dan Wafford
Every individual, company, university, non-profit or charitable organization first determines how much money is on hand, then sets a budget accordingly. Only governments think they should be able to spend with little or no restraint, then lean on taxpayers to come up with the required amount. Read more
Comment Commented Alex Imas
One of the great mysteries in the world is why Mr. Ferguson still has a platform of any kind to write about this topic after he has put together one of the most remarkable records of transparent failure the intellectual world has ever seen since the start of the Great Recession.
It's not just that Mr. Ferguson is wrong-- it's that the manner in which he's wrong shows a painful lack of understanding of the basic logic underpinning the other side's arguments. There's no better way to convince an impartial observer of Mr. Skidelsky and Mr. Krugman's correctness than to put their work side by side with Ferguson's. Read more
Comment Commented Gianluca Cerritelli
Actually Krugman has been right most of the time. Of course you don't have to believe me. If you want some numbers I suggest you read this research by Hamilton University, about the accuracy of the predictions of 26 prominent economists:
http://www.hamilton.edu/documents/An-Analysis-of-the-Accuracy-of-Forecasts-in-the-Political-Media.pdf
Also, generally when he is not right, Krugman admits it (see wages stickiness for an example) Read more
Comment Commented Scott Sherman
Krugman has been wrong more times than right! Look at his record. Why do you think he has never worked in the Private sector for very long? Those who can't, teach! Skidie is the same. Anyone can do 20/20 hindsight. Skidie has been kicked out of places, he is a politician first and foremost. Read more
Comment Commented Todd Clay
If they'd (and I mean all countries) had given the money to the poor instead of the wealthy it probably would've been close to a non-event because poor people have a lot of pent-up demands that they are unable to fulfill and often are "robbing Peter to pay Paul". Read more
Comment Commented simon noble
In the 70s Skidelsky railed against the devalue and spend advice of Caldor. What happened? Read more
Comment Commented robert mcdowell
Silly to debate opinion without reference to precise facts - but also silly to assume government is the prime determiner of what happens - bank lending and international context are more powerful. Government talks policy to appeal to voters' intuition. but may talk the talk more than walk the walk. Government spending cuts of £120bn cost £90bn in lost tax revenue over 4 years. Borrowings of £500bn was offset by half due to QE buying in government bonds. Money flowed in from southern Europe for a few years - about £250bn that helped pump up London property and the wider economy a little. No point in Keynesian boost if Europe and major trading partners are not growing, or not much, and above all not much point in cutting spending or taxes if banks are shrining their loans to business massively? Osborne may or not be callous or self-defeating or a great pragmatist, but he is only one large cog in the wheel. Read more
Comment Commented Ananthan Krishnan
Why anyone takes Mr Ferguson seriously as an economist is beyond me. As others have pointed out, he seems impervious to his own (repeated) blunders while castigating Mr Krugman ( a real economist) constantly for imaginary errors - Krugman never said that high levels of deficits had no consequences; just that in a deep recession, reviving demand was the first priority; not fiscal deficits. Mr Ferguson - pl go back to whatever is your speciality is; leave economies to economists, as imperfect as they are. Read more
Comment Commented Thomas Markson
@Scott:
Please continue to wow us with your ad hominem attacks and deference to the market as arbiter of all. Your argumentation style is a perfect testament to your cause. Read more
Comment Commented Scott Sherman
Mr. Krugman was an advisor for Enron and look how that worked out! Get a clue, Paul never really has had a job in the realm of economics in the private sector. His analysis for the most part has been horrible. No one in the private sector takes him serious, he needs to stay in academics, that is the only place he will survive! What did you think of his ACA analysis? Read more
Comment Commented Liviu Nicolaescu
" “I can’t eat an iPad.” This could go down in history as the line that launched the great inflation of the 2010s."
This is how Mr. Ferguson started his 2010 "prophetic" Newsweek article. He ended that article as dramatically
"Or maybe inflation expectations started shifting when the guy from Goldman—a Marie Antoinette for our times—seemed to say: let them eat iPads!".
Throughout the post financial crisis period Mr. Ferguson's predictions, especially those concerning the American economy, have been reliably unreliable. They have generated a huge caveat shadowing his very well articulated proclamations.
The widespread price fixing scandals of all sorts indicate that the laissez-fair approach, promoted so masterfully by Mr. Ferguson, is incapable accept the existence of ulterior motives n the financial markets.
Maybe his unenviable track record would end when Mr. Ferguson will learn to swallow his predictions, with a nice cup of tea.
Read more
Comment Commented Alejandro Moreno
The neoclassical proposals have widespread within the ceteris paribus, but the harsh reality causes the collapse of them - because no consider people and its complexity; So Its mathematics is overwhelmed by the social, so its work only aims to make their patrons be happy. Globalization effects makes strengthen to Keynes. Read more
Comment Commented Henry Rech
Niall,
"Now it is the turn of his biographer, Robert Skidelsky, to become distinctly more Keynesian than Keynes."
I am beginning to wonder who is more Keynesian than Keynes given you quote extensively from Keynes in your piece. Your ecumenism is admirable, with perhaps just a faint resonance with irony.
"Yet even Skidelsky admits that he and his fellow Keynesians “cannot prove” this. "
Which of any economic theories can be "proved"?
"But that presupposes what he cannot prove: that a larger deficit could have been run without any costs. "
Isn't the point that the economy was running well under speed with under-utilized resources and capacity in which case maintaining government spending would have only had minimal costs if any.
"After all, other forces were at work after 2010...."
Indeed, but what is the optimal policy response?
"... financial markets are not always convinced by heavily indebted governments that promise to solve their problems by borrowing even more. "
Why should anyone give a tinker's for what markets think. Market players act in their own self interest which can be and is more often than not at variance with the national interest.
" Given the way Keynesianism came to be associated with inflationary fiscal and monetary policies in the 1970s..."
We have to take care to distinguish the sins of humanity
and their namesake messiah. Nothing novel here.
"....it is easy to forget what a hawk Keynes was in his final years."
I have not read the biographies, but I am betting Keynes was a conservative most of his life yet one with a sensible compassion.
Read more
Comment Commented Thomas Markson
"which some non-Keynesians, including me, actually predicted before it happened"
Huh. Didn't realize non-Keynesians were the only ones to warn about risks of the eurozone formation (Hint: They weren't).
"Nowadays, some economists seem to believe that pointing out a single factual error (out of more than 20 statements of fact) invalidates an entire argument. But, while it may cause a flutter on Twitter, that is not the way serious intellectual debate works."
You're right, a simple error isn't sufficient, but it does cause a bayesian update away from your views. And with the number of "factual errors" you seem to make (like the one above), I'm doing a whole lot of updating. Read more
Comment Commented Alejandro Moreno
It should not surprise the author, after all, J. M Keynes established something very important, that the neoclassical economist put aside, it is that Keynes and his theory of state intervention to achieve full employment, he questioned the infallibility of the invisible hand of Adam Smith, saying that government intervention was necessary in certain cases to ensure the general welfare of the people, indeed in this scholastic of Keynesianism is the future of the economy. Read more
Comment Commented Ralph Musgrave
Garbage as usual from Niall Ferguson. Read more
Comment Commented Michael Public
Bah. Economies are complex, constantly in flux and inherently difficult to predict. A trend can be predictive of future events for several decades and then things simply change. This 'debate' is more of a mudslinging contest and is difficult to follow and mostly uninteresting. The divide seems more political than it is ideological. Move along. Read more
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