WASHINGTON — The other day New York Times columnist
(and Nobel Laureate, though he has yet to be found guilty of
plagiarism or fabrication) Paul Krugman indulged one of my
favorite pastimes. He engaged in vituperation. He affected a
superior pose and lamented that so many of the other superior
types had been taken in by mere hucksters. Alas and goddamn!
Said he: “One depressing aspect of American politics is the
susceptibility of the political and media establishment to
charlatans. You might have thought, given past experience, that
D.C. insiders [of his quality of mind] would be on their guard
against conservatives with grandiose plans. But no….” His
target was Congressman Paul Ryan and Ryan’s effort to eventually
balance the budget in light of the huge challenges facing America
today from the cost of entitlements and the yearly budget
deficits as far as the eye can see. Ryan calls his plan “A
Roadmap for America’s Future.” Krugman is Ryan’s sworn
enemy.
Though I have never seen Ryan described as “intellectually
audacious,” Krugman insists that the term is a commonplace and
goes on to josh, “But it’s the audacity of dopes.” He throws
around the word flimflam, as in “he’s [Ryan is] serving up
leftovers from the 1990s, drenched in flimflam sauce.” He uses
flimflam elsewhere and concludes that “The Ryan plan is a fraud
that makes no useful contribution to the debate over America’s
fiscal future.” Well, the agelastic sap is trying his best to be
a wit, and I say give him a pass. He is a prof at Princeton and
laughter in those parched precincts has been banned since around
the 1920s when the students and the junior faculty were suspected
of reading Mencken and Nathan’s American Mercury and
concluding that they were even funnier than Marx (Karl not
Groucho). That offended the profs.
I, at least, found “audacity of dopes” mildly amusing, and
I laughed aloud at flimflam used as a sauce or perhaps it was the
idea that the decade of the 1990s was an unalloyed economic
failure. I really cannot remember which, but I laughed.
Yet, Krugman’s main criticism of “A Roadmap for America’s
Future” is in error, and possibly intentionally so. Those
Washington insiders that he is patronizing are not too smart. He
claims that the “Roadmap” does not raise the revenues necessary
to cover Ryan’s cuts — thus it is flimflam.
In response to similar criticism Ryan has
written, “Our nation’s fiscal crisis is the result of
Washington’s unsustainable spending trajectory, not from a lack
of sufficient revenue.” And he goes on, “The tax reforms proposed
and the rates specified were designed to maintain approximately
our historic levels of revenue as a share of GDP….If needed,
adjustments can be easily made to the specified rates to hit the
revenue targets and maximize economic growth. While minor tweaks
can be made, it is clear that we simply cannot chase our
unsustainable growth in spending with ever-higher levels of
taxes. The purpose of the Roadmap is to get spending in line with
revenue — not the other way around.”
Now it is always possible that Krugman has not actually
followed the debate over the Roadmap and argues from ignorance.
This happens quite often with him. Yet all Americans should be
following this debate over how to address looming entitlements
and our budgetary shortfalls. Frankly, I think we have entered a
new era. Americans are willing to take cuts in their entitlements
for the good of the economy and the wellbeing of future
generations. As for Krugman, give him a polite laugh. Ha ha,
professor, “leftover from the 1990s, drenched in flimflam sauce.”
That is a good one, and how are we going to get the economy
growing again with tax hikes flambé?