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Good and Boring
In times of crisis, good news is no news. Iceland’s meltdown made headlines; the remarkable stability of Canada’s banks, not so much.
Yet as the world’s attention shifts from financial rescue to financial reform, the quiet success stories deserve at least as much attention as the spectacular failures. We need to learn from those countries that evidently did it right. And leading that list is our neighbor to the north. Right now, Canada is a very important role model.
Yes, I know, Canada is supposed to be dull. The New Republic famously pronounced “Worthwhile Canadian Initiative” (from a Times Op-Ed column in the ’80s) the world’s most boring headline. But I’ve always considered Canada fascinating, precisely because it’s similar to the United States in many but not all ways. The point is that when Canadian and U.S. experience diverge, it’s a very good bet that policy differences, rather than differences in culture or economic structure, are responsible for that divergence.
And anyway, when it comes to banking, boring is good.
First, some background. Over the past decade the United States and Canada faced the same global environment. Both were confronted with the same flood of cheap goods and cheap money from Asia. Economists in both countries cheerfully declared that the era of severe recessions was over.
But when things fell apart, the consequences were very different here and there. In the United States, mortgage defaults soared, some major financial institutions collapsed, and others survived only thanks to huge government bailouts. In Canada, none of that happened. What did the Canadians do differently?
It wasn’t interest rate policy. Many commentators have blamed the Federal Reserve for the financial crisis, claiming that the Fed created a disastrous bubble by keeping interest rates too low for too long. But Canadian interest rates have tracked U.S. rates quite closely, so it seems that low rates aren’t enough by themselves to produce a financial crisis.
Canada’s experience also seems to refute the view, forcefully pushed by Paul Volcker, the formidable former Fed chairman, that the roots of our crisis lay in the scale and scope of our financial institutions — in the existence of banks that were “too big to fail.” For in Canada essentially all the banks are too big to fail: just five banking groups dominate the financial scene.
On the other hand, Canada’s experience does seem to support the views of people like Elizabeth Warren, the head of the Congressional panel overseeing the bank bailout, who place much of the blame for the crisis on failure to protect consumers from deceptive lending. Canada has an independent Financial Consumer Agency, and it has sharply restricted subprime-type lending.
Above all, Canada’s experience seems to support those who say that the way to keep banking safe is to keep it boring — that is, to limit the extent to which banks can take on risk. The United States used to have a boring banking system, but Reagan-era deregulation made things dangerously interesting. Canada, by contrast, has maintained a happy tedium.
More specifically, Canada has been much stricter about limiting banks’ leverage, the extent to which they can rely on borrowed funds. It has also limited the process of securitization, in which banks package and resell claims on their loans outstanding — a process that was supposed to help banks reduce their risk by spreading it, but has turned out in practice to be a way for banks to make ever-bigger wagers with other people’s money.
There’s no question that in recent years these restrictions meant fewer opportunities for bankers to come up with clever ideas than would have been available if Canada had emulated America’s deregulatory zeal. But that, it turns out, was all to the good.
So what are the chances that the United States will learn from Canada’s success?
Actually, the financial reform bill that the House of Representatives passed in December would significantly Canadianize the U.S. system. It would create an independent Consumer Financial Protection Agency, it would establish limits on leverage, and it would limit securitization by requiring that lenders hold on to some of their loans.
But prospects for a comparable bill getting the 60 votes now needed to push anything through the Senate are doubtful. Republicans are clearly dead set against any significant financial reform — not a single Republican voted for the House bill — and some Democrats are ambivalent, too.
So there’s a good chance that we’ll do nothing, or nothing much, to prevent future banking crises. But it won’t be because we don’t know what to do: we’ve got a clear example of how to keep banking safe sitting right next door.
- Posted in


70 Comments so far
Show AllRemind me again why we need a Senate.
The concept of 2 senators from each state became outmoded during the 19th century when some states grew much faster than others. As long as each California Senator represents nearly 18 million people while each Wyoming Senator represents a few hundred thousand, Seanate actions will not represent the majority of Americans.
Small states have to much power. There are many things we can do. It takes leadership. We don't have that..
Abolish the Senate! It is un-democratic, highly dis-proportional and institutionally corrupt to the bone.
The whole government is corrupt, un-democratic and highly favors the dis-proportional 1% and their minions. Abolish the constitution and write another.
Why would we need to start over? Our Ford Model T of a government has the advantage of having been worked on for over 200 years by a great number of crooked and incompetent mechanics.
Rather, abolish the entire Congress.
I agree that the senate represents an imbalance of power. I used to live in Nebraska, and now I live in NYC. During the so-called health care ("insurance") reform debates, Ben Nelson, the senator from Nebraska, has literally held "we the people" hostage to his very narrow view of what health care should be in this country. Nebraska has a population of about 1,796,619 people, while in NYC, alone, almost 1.5 million people are unemployed, and Mayor Bloomberg is getting ready to fire more people.
Far from boring...
...Neo-conservative Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has shut down the government to avoid a war crimes inquiry.
From The Real News:
http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival
=4755&updaterx=2010-02-01+10%3A09%3A08
This is costing Harper BIG time at the polls and was a major tactical mistake. Prior to this action he was running high in the Polls and trending towards an outright Conservative majority.
Since then his support has bled away . Conservatives led the Liberals by some 40 points to 20 points. Since he prorogued Parlimanet he has they are all but even at 30/30.
For Canadians this might have been a good thing. It staves off the changes of a Conservative Majority for months if not years meaning Harper dare not try and call an election.
Harper Came out of a right wing fringe party who at first called themselves the "Conservative Reform Alliance Party" before they realized that they were in fact CRAP. They rose out of Alberta and were the closest thing to republicans that you could find in Canada. Canada is only a few years behind the USA in crazy thinking and on their way towards appeasing corporate interests as a matter of routine.
Hahahaha. CRAP. You got that right. Harper will be lucky to get a ride back to Parliament Hill when his little prank is over. He'll be attending the Vancouver Olympics, you know. Protests have been organized through social networking. The protests have been large and loud. There is even a country wide protest on the Olympic Torch Relay because the IOC has partnered with corporations that have a very bad record on environmental and social issues. Small protests are happening at local bank branches and gas pumps all along the route of the Olympic Torch Relay. These small protests most likely have a greater impact as they are even being held in some of the very smallest communities. The US just never hears about what goes on in Canada.
Check out rabble dot ca and see for yourself.
quit with the 60 votes BS....... reconcilliation was used by the bushies EVERY time they wanted something done.....
In fact the rethugs have not had a 60 seat majority since the 1920's and seem to be able to get stuff done.....
the democrats simply use the 60 vote canard as an excuse for not having to do anything but enrich corporate coffers.....
krugman should know this but chooses to "play the game" making him just another corporate HACK!
Shut up already!
KRUGMAN is part of the problem with his 60 vote BS!
A large part of our slide into fascism.......
thanks for nothing krugman......
Yes, Obama repeatedly uses the 60 vote excuse to make sure that his supply-side policies get implemented every time.
If they were really serious about passing a health care bill, they would have made the Republicans actually Filibuster, not just threaten to do it. Then he could have said to the American people here we the Democrats are trying to give you a national health care system and the republicans are reading out of a phone book trying to stop it. That probably would have had some political traction.
Pretty pitiful stuff.
"But with the Democrats in power, his value has markedly diminished. His criticisms of the Dems tend to be muted & wishy-washy, & he's often making feeble excuses for them (as with this "60 votes" BS).
It's worth noting that Krugman was not particularly scathing about the Wall St bailout. He criticized it, but only tepidly. (By contrast, Joseph Stiglitz, another liberal economist & Nobel laureate, called the bailout a "robbery of the American people.") -- RichM
As usual, your analysis hits the nail on its head, so to speak!
Michael Hudson has a new article posted on counterpunch.org -- for anyone who is interested.
Reading this article brought me to realize how the filibuster rule in the Senate replicates the 2/3 vote to pass a tax bill constituent of the California constitution by initiated measure. Incorporating a like mechanism of paralysis, undoubtedly the same fate as confronts California will confront the Federal Government.
Canada is a perfect example of how to do things right, which is exactly why the people who run this country (and I don't mean our "august" elected leadership) will never adopt any of her sensible ways. Another one of Krugman's useless ditties that is quickly read and even more quickly forgotten.
I knew it but a lot of people didn't know that it was possible to prevent the WallStreet housing/derivative bubbles from forming, and that the example is set just over our northern border. Krugman should at least be acknowledged for communicating that information to a broader audience.
We should also point out, often and loudly, how inexpensive Canada's healthcare system (single payer) is, how superior it is, how universal it is, and how over 80% of Canadians wouldn't take anything else.
It not like the solutions to our problems can't be found. You can find them on any northerly walk out of Washington State or Maine.
the canadian health care system costs 350 per month per person......... france's system costs 325 per month per person..... the USA system cost 850 per month to cover 80% of the people.......
And obama says "does anyone have any ideas - i'd be happy to hear about them"
what a fool.....
or maybe we the people are the fools to not see thru this shit called candy
So true. I'm thinking he said that to be funny? "Anyone, anyone at all? No? You sure? Ok, last time: does ANYONE have ANY ideas on healthcare?" LOL.
What's that, Dr. Margaret Flowers? I can't HEEAAARRR you...
First I was hopeful. Then I was dubious. Then I was disappointed. Now I'm getting angry.
To state matters more simply, Canada kept the Bankers in charge of their banks. In the United States the operations of the banks were turned over to Banksters.
The Canadian bankers operated the Canadian banks as banks, the American Banksters operated America’s banks as fronts for criminal scams including lending practices that were unsupported by sufficient reserve assets. Lending practices that lent money to people that did not have a snowball’s chance in hell to repay the loan, but the bank didn’t care because the banksters had securitized the bogus loans and fraudulently sold them off as falsely overrated bonds. And the biggest banks were issuing defacto financial insurance policies with no funds what so ever to back the insurance liability.
Canadian banks did not experience a financial crisis when the world’s economy slowed, while America’s banks and financial system collapsed.
Because of the American neoconservative’s worshiping of “deregulation” the many abuses of the banking system by the banksters, that would have been criminal offenses in previous generations, were no longer specifically criminal acts so instead of prosecuting the Bankster’s criminal actions the Federal government of the United States bailed them out at a massive cost to ordinary American taxpayers.
(The following is where Krugman fears to tread)
Due to the virtually complete takeover of political power in the United States by the economic special interests the problems that allowed America’s financial sector to fail will not be corrected, at extreme costs once again, which will be shifted onto America’s taxpayers...once again...and once again...and once again...
Sioux Rose
MAD: Thanks. You did a far better job than Mr. Krugman at explaining the contrast in mechanisms and operational dynamics between both nations' banking systems. I suppose he's limited by what his newspaper will allow him to print (or reveal). Can't have another panic now, can we... too soon for the recently falsely-inflated bubble to burst!
Canada also regulates the amount of down-payment required to purchase a home. Canadians cannot get a mortgage on a home they cannot afford.
Canada did NOT offer interest only mortgages.
"Yet as the world’s attention shifts from financial rescue to financial reform"
It wasn't a rescue. It was thievery.
krugman is a tool.
who cares. i'm in that mood again. this is the usofa. where the majority of our citizens don't have a clue. the only positive change i've seen in this country is the way parents treat their children. i go into the supermarket and i see mom's and dad's talking with their kids, little ones 3 and 4 years old, as if the child's conversation is really worth listening to. no yanking no demanding the child shuts up while adults are talking and no spankings. other than that fascism reigns. i'm 65 years old married and two kids of my own. i own them, ha ha. i think they like me. some things do change for the better.
Nothing will happen in this country because:
1. Our government is much too corrupt.
2. Our government is much too cozy with those they should regulate.
3. Republicans keep preaching "free markets," and totally ignore the fact that all human beings are fallible. Freedom, taken to excess facilitates the very corruption they profess to abhor. Regulation is what keeps the system and us honest.
4. Most Americans are such braggarts that to admit Canada might have a better handle on solving this problem is tantamount to treason. One more for the Tea Baggers!
The root cause of Canada's success is a parliamentary system of government. The root cause of our failures is believing our "faux democracy" is somehow better.
"So what are the chances that the United States will learn from Canada’s success?"
Zero. From banking to health care to sustainable farming, the world abounds with solutions to the USAs problems. Whether it's due to arrogance, stupidity or some combination thereof, the USA refuses to learn from others.
This inability to perceive reality or to respond to it is a sign that the good ole USA is toast. Dead meat. Stick a fork in it and turn it over.
I for one, am weary of participating in a nation-state that only rewards greed and stupidity.
Oh my Paul that was a hard-hitting article. Talk about boring: I learned nothing from this article except a couple of half-truths and some white-wash. Paul K is a great example of a mainstream liberal "expert" who cannot see the forest for the trees.
"So what are the chances that the United States will learn from Canada’s success?"
But what does PK mean by "United States" and by "success"?
When he says "United States," he is referring to the powerful policymakers, the plutocrats and oligarchs who make the rules.
But when he says "success," he is speaking from the perspective of the citizenry in general.
The interests of the two groups are entirely different.
There is no reason to think that the plutocrats are too stupid to get the lesson. Much more likely that they get the lesson all too well.
There is no need to look at Europe, actually. You can just look at Canada to see how far into right wing loony land the US has gone. All three Canadian political parties are left of both US parties. That is, all three Canadian parties are more pro-worker and pro-common man than both of the US parties.
Just to name a few examples of differences, all three Canadian parties support national health care, public ownership of many utilities, and true public education. All of these things are lost or in the final stages of being lost in the US.
The US starting about 1980 went off the deep end, pure and simple, and now people who can't get a job or who don't have a house are paying the price. And they will continue to pay the price in most cases for the rest of their lives. Through such things as credit ratings, elites are able to transfer responsibility for their failures onto ordinary people.
Both US parties are dragging the country down the drain now. We can only hope, especially if progressives and perhaps libertarian conservatives continue to stubbornly resist unifying into a new party, that if the system completely collapses, that BOTH the Republican and the Democratic parties go into the dustbin of history. At that point, there would be a clean slate for a fresh start.
I believe that even conservatives in Europe support national healthcare. Just as Republicans here at least give lip service to Medicare and Social Security, though some still dream of privatizing these basic services.
"Keep government out of my Medicare!" That one is indeed quite rich.
Once these programs are set up no one, but the most doctrinaire, complains they are "socialistic." All that is forgotten (except by the most doctrinaire, and those, of course, who see potential profit in the privatization of Social Security/Medicare.)
Perhaps the two political parties in this country should go into the "dustbin of history?" But if the Republican Party falls apart where will all its "conservatives" go? They will still be there. Just as conservative Democrats and Blue Dogs will still be around if the Democratic Party falls completely apart. We don't have a parliament here so a parliamentary system can not work. We have two parties because they naturally fit into the structure of our government. Its structure doesn't really permit a third.
It all comes down, once again, to who votes. Voters choose, no matter how much money private interests put into a campaign. When you vote, after all, don't you believe you choose who to vote for on your own, without being influenced by spurious advertising and the like? By who merely spent the most money?
The reason why Barbara Lee, a good progressive, represents Berkeley is because a majority of the voters there chose her. The reason why Marcia Blackburn represents her conservative district in Tennessee is because a majority backed her there. That's the way democracy works. In fact, studies have shown that though most Americans are discontented with our representatives in government they approve of the one representing them in their own district.
Human nature won't change by destroying the two parties. Clearly, what we have to do is fight a little harder for what we believe in. Vote the right way and attempt to get our reps to vote in the right way.
Is it not possible to change the supermajority requirement with a bill in Congress that would make a simple majority all that is necessary in the Senate to pass legislation there?
Perhaps the reason the USA is stalled is that both parties would rather see a leveling of the middle class so that labor has to compete with the much lower wages of competing Chinese and Indian economies.
The inertia of obsolete and self defeating policies by the elite may be the juggernaut leading to devastating environmental and social consequences. Perhaps the crisis of resistance that follows could lead to a horizontal, Gaia respecting community rule.
Resistance though requires more than wishful thinking.
To change the Senate rules requires a 67 vote.
If anyone brought up a bill to end the filibuster it could be filibustered. Forget 67 votes.
There were more than 100 filibusters last year. Whereas a few decades ago the sum annual total would be between ten or twenty, reserved for special occasions. At that time the filibuster could even be seen as a useful conservative block. It worked both ways. When Southern Democrats filibustered civil rights legislation it would drive progressives mad. When the filibuster was used to block some especially harmful Republican legislation or reactionary appointments it came in handy.
But now the filibuster requires a super majority to get anything meaningful done. It is way overused and abused.
Tell me, at the beginning of each Congress (the next one is a year from now) can a simple majority prevail to change the Senate's rules? Or does the 2/3s majority hold?
Reforming the Senate?
"In U.S. politics, the nuclear option is an attempt by a majority of the United States Senate to end a filibuster by invoking a point of order to essentially declare the filibuster unconstitutional which can be decided by a simple majority, rather than seeking formal cloture with a supermajority of 60 senators. Although it is not provided for in the formal rules of the Senate, the procedure is the subject of a 1957 parliamentary opinion and has been used on several occasions since." Wiki
IT ONLY TAKES 51 VOTES !
It's not as simple as that. (Wickepedia is an unmonitored source which allows anyone to add whatever he wishes.)
Thanks to Salon for the following........
While it takes three-fifths of the Senate, or 60 votes, to cut off debate on most things, the Senate has previously recognized that changing the rules of the game should require something more. Thus, Senate Rule XXII says that debate on a "a measure or motion to amend the Senate rules" can't be cut off without an "affirmative vote" from "two-thirds of the Senators present and voting." That means that 67 votes would be needed to cut off debate on a change in the Senate's rules.
The presiding officer of the Senate would take it upon himself to declare Rule XXII unconstitutional. Riddick's, considered the bible of Senate procedure, has this to say about that: "Under the precedents of the Senate, the presiding officer has no authority to pass upon a constitutional question, but must submit it to the Senate for its decision." By unilaterally deeming Rule XXII unconstitutional, the presiding officer would be violating that precedent.
There's more....... To see where this came from go to:
http://dir.salon.com/news/feature/2005/05/12/nuclear_option_primer/index.html
"My earlier post pointed out that climate change and real health care reform should not depend upon the likes of Joe Lieberman or Kent Conrad or Ben Nelson. Senate Majority Whip Robert Byrd changed the math needed to overcome the filibuster in 1975, when the number needed to invoke cloture and overcome the filibuster changed to three fifths of the Senators sworn (60 votes) from the previous two thirds of those voting (66) . Historically the filibuster has been used to stall progressive change, including the Civil Rights Act of 1957, when Strom Thurmond set a record of 24 hours and 18 minutes of talking a bill to death.
Rule 22 of the Senate, governing filibusters, can be changed or eliminated by a simple majority according to the US Supreme Court in U.S. v. Ballin (1892) Senate rules call for 67 to change the cloture rule, but Democrats should be able to rewrite the rules since they control the Rules Committee. Rule 22 can go out the door all together or be modified. Republicans under Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist threatened to blow up the filibuster in 2005 with far fewer numbers. What are Democrats waiting for?"
Jamie Court via Huffington Post
That is false. A rules change requires only a majority. There may, however, be time restraints - once they're in session, the requirements are higher (this isn't quite clear - ask the Senate Parliamentarian).
In practice, it's up to the Majority Leader. There will be a new one next year: Reid is way behind in his re-election campaign. And the new one might be a Republican, the way things are going.
Wrong ... Reforming the Senate takes 51 votes ...
"In U.S. politics, the nuclear option is an attempt by a majority of the United States Senate to end a filibuster by invoking a point of order to essentially declare the filibuster unconstitutional which can be decided by a simple majority, rather than seeking formal cloture with a supermajority of 60 senators. Although it is not provided for in the formal rules of the Senate, the procedure is the subject of a 1957 parliamentary opinion and has been used on several occasions since." Wiki
IT ONLY TAKES 51 VOTES !
Paul "Shifty" Krugman at it again ...
What Shifty doesn't mention, or even allude to, is that Canada nationalized their Central Bank in 1936.
Must have slipped his mind ...
I don't quite catch your meaning.
Are you saying that nationalizing the central bank is inherently (ideologically?) bad, even if it leads to good results?
Or are you saying Krugman doesn't have the balls to tell Americans that some elements of socialism can work?
Pls clarify, thx.
Canada also isn't suffering from an epidemic of Greedism, and the Canadian government doesn't consider citizens Consumers first and People second.
That's why their system(s) really work, ultimately - because Canadians aren't spending every waking moment trying to screw one another out of every possible penny...
IOW, their system(s) work because they WANT them to work.
Just a quick reminder:
"Iceland’s meltdown made headlines"; it also made Iceland's Green Party a major party and nearly coequal partner in the government (the party is only 10 years old.)
We had a meltdown, too. In fact, ours caused Iceland's. Is there a lesson to be drawn here?
Iceland is now embroiled in a controversy whether to pay off the British and Dutch, thus indebting themselves forever, and join the EU, thus giving up control of their chief resource, the fisheries. These are survival issues for Iceland, a nation of survivors. The Green Party favors the increasingly popular "no" position, versus the Social Democrats they share power with.
There will be a referendum on the issue; at this point, "no" is well ahead. If there's a new election, the Greens will be the lead party in a national government.
Reforming the Senate?
"In U.S. politics, the nuclear option is an attempt by a majority of the United States Senate to end a filibuster by invoking a point of order to essentially declare the filibuster unconstitutional which can be decided by a simple majority, rather than seeking formal cloture with a supermajority of 60 senators. Although it is not provided for in the formal rules of the Senate, the procedure is the subject of a 1957 parliamentary opinion and has been used on several occasions since." Wiki
IT ONLY TAKES 51 VOTES !
It's not as simple as that. (Wickepedia is an unmonitored source which allows anyone to add whatever he wishes.)
Thanks to Salon for the following........
While it takes three-fifths of the Senate, or 60 votes, to cut off debate on most things, the Senate has previously recognized that changing the rules of the game should require something more. Thus, Senate Rule XXII says that debate on a "a measure or motion to amend the Senate rules" can't be cut off without an "affirmative vote" from "two-thirds of the Senators present and voting." That means that 67 votes would be needed to cut off debate on a change in the Senate's rules.
The presiding officer of the Senate would take it upon himself to declare Rule XXII unconstitutional. Riddick's, considered the bible of Senate procedure, has this to say about that: "Under the precedents of the Senate, the presiding officer has no authority to pass upon a constitutional question, but must submit it to the Senate for its decision." By unilaterally deeming Rule XXII unconstitutional, the presiding officer would be violating that precedent.
There's more....... To see where this came from go to:
http://dir.salon.com/news/feature/2005/05/12/nuclear_option_primer/index.html
"My earlier post pointed out that climate change and real health care reform should not depend upon the likes of Joe Lieberman or Kent Conrad or Ben Nelson. Senate Majority Whip Robert Byrd changed the math needed to overcome the filibuster in 1975, when the number needed to invoke cloture and overcome the filibuster changed to three fifths of the Senators sworn (60 votes) from the previous two thirds of those voting (66) . Historically the filibuster has been used to stall progressive change, including the Civil Rights Act of 1957, when Strom Thurmond set a record of 24 hours and 18 minutes of talking a bill to death.
Rule 22 of the Senate, governing filibusters, can be changed or eliminated by a simple majority according to the US Supreme Court in U.S. v. Ballin (1892) Senate rules call for 67 to change the cloture rule, but Democrats should be able to rewrite the rules since they control the Rules Committee. Rule 22 can go out the door all together or be modified. Republicans under Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist threatened to blow up the filibuster in 2005 with far fewer numbers. What are Democrats waiting for?"
Jamie Court via Huffington Post
Yet another article from the Nobel laureate in economics that does not contain the word "capitalism" or any of its cognates.
Krugman fails to raise the crucial question: Why has the hypertrophy of finance--risky, leveraged, securitized--especially characterized the evolution of US corporate capitalism in the last generation? To consider this question honestly would require raising the possibility that "liberal" capitalist advocates such as Krugman find literally unthinkable, namely, the possibility that capitalism is exhibiting symptoms of terminal and irreversible decline. ("Leverage" of all sorts--ranging from low capital ratios to "easy money"--is the principal financial means historically utilized by capital in order to go beyond its felt limitations.)
The class character of capitalism, esp. US capitalism, is of course unaddressed by Prof. Krugman. Here is the real secret to the failure of financial "reform" that even he registers: Under capitalism, politics is the vehicle of economics--today more than ever.
The daily business press--Bloomberg, etc.--is full of news of the capitalists and their government representatives' agonizing over how much "reform" to allow. They are quite aware that their "excesses" brought the recent financial crisis; but they are equally aware that such "excesses" are essential to the profitability that they require. This dilemma is unsolvable by capitalism as a system; which is why you can bet upon the inevitability of future crises.
soloduff raises the issue that Paul Krugman, and others, fail to use the term "capitalism" when discussing the economic situation in the USA. I find it even more extraordinary that none of the knowledgeable posters have mentioned, possibly because they haven't read, that incredibly insightful critique of capitalism, first published in 1917, variously entitled, but ultimately published as "Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism" by V. I. Lenin.
Best get a copy and read it. It could have been written last week in terms of its continuing relevancy and insight to the present state of affairs.