Debunking the Liberal
Narrative
The
emperor’s new clothes were invisible; in Washington’s fiscal fairy tale,
austerity is too. Although an increasing number of people are expressing
concern that federal spending cuts are endangering the economy, it begs a
fundamental question: What austerity?
It is
understandable why last week’s 2.5 percent real GDP growth figure troubled
many. First, it was below the consensus 3 percent expectation. More
importantly, the economy has been dismal for so long that America’s conditioned
reflex is despondency.
Even though
America’s last negative growth quarter was 2009’s Q2, the economy’s annual real
growth rate has underperformed thusly: 2009, minus-3.1 percent; 2010, 2.4
percent; 2011, 1.8 percent; and 2012, 2.2 percent. If the Blue Chip consensus
forecast is correct, this year growth will also be just 2.2 percent --
something last week’s figure made much more likely.
After
four-years-going-on-five of such economic anemia, liberals sorely need a new
culprit -- especially with their favorite whipping boy, George W. Bush, now far
removed from office. Enter Europe, stage left. Or rather, Europe’s “austerity,”
to be more precise.