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Sunday 19 June 2011

Why the economic recovery is lagging—Posner


06/19/2011

The U.S. economy is stagnant; the proposition that we had a mere “recession” which “ended” two years ago, is, like the terminology of sovereign default (“debt restructuring”), just an exercise in euphemism. Real (that is, inflation-adjusted) GDP per capita has declined by almost 3 percent since 2007. (This is on the assumption that the first-quarter 2011 increase in GDP at an annual rate of 1.8 percent, not adjusted for inflation or population growth, will be the full-year real per capita increase—in fact, if unadjusted GDP grows by less than 3 percent for the year as a whole, the real per capita GDP will decline.) At the same time, the national debt has soared (it is currently $14.3 trillion, of which $9.7 trillion is “public debt”—that is, debt owed bondholders rather than social security annuitants and other entitlement holders), and unemployment exceeds 9 percent, with about half the unemployed not having worked for at least six months.


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