Newsweek's Krugman Cover Story: Obama's Loyal Opposition

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Newsweek's Krugman Cover Story: Obama's Loyal Opposition stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

Huffington Post   |   April 10, 2009 at 02:53 PM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It
Paul Krugman And Obama

New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has been one of the most vocal critics of the Obama administration's bank bailout plan. As the Financial Times noted Friday, Krugman is one of the "many prominent left-leaning economists" who is leading what the article referred to as "the liberal backlash" against Obama. For example, in a widely-read post on his blog "Conscience of a Liberal" last Saturday, Krugman criticized Geithner's plan for the banks, declaring that "the zombie ideas have won." His critique quickly echoed around the blogosphere and beyond.

This week's issue of Newsweek highlights, and perhaps helps solidify, Krugman's status as arguably the most prominent, influential and prescient critic of the administration on the left by featuring him on the magazine's cover alongside the headline "OBAMA IS WRONG: The Loyal Opposition of Paul Krugman." (SCROLL DOWN FOR IMAGE OF COVER)

As Newsweek editor Jon Meacham writes in his letter to the magazine's readers about the Krugman article:

Every once a while, ... a critic emerges who is more than a chatterer--a critic with credibility whose views seem more than a little plausible and who manages to rankle those in power in more than passing ways. As the debate over the rescue of the financial system--the crucial step toward stabilizing the economy and returning the country to prosperity--unfolds, the man on our cover this week, Paul Krugman of The New York Times, has emerged as the kind of critic who, as Evan Thomas writes, appears disturbingly close to the mark when he expresses his 'despair' over the administration's bailout plan. [...]


There is little doubt that Krugman--Nobel laureate and Princeton professor--has be come the voice of the loyal opposition. What is striking about this development is that Obama's most thoughtful critic is taking on the president from the left at a time when, as Jonathan Alter notes, so many others are reflexively arguing that the administration is trying too much too soon.


Read the full article by Evan Thomas here.

From the article:

Krugman is having his 15 minutes and enjoying it, although at moments, as I followed him around last week, he seemed a little overwhelmed. He is an unusual mix, at once nervous, shy, sweet and fiercely sure of himself. He enjoys his outsider's power: "No one has as big a megaphone as I have," he says. "Aside from the world going to hell, it's great." He is in much demand on the talk-show circuit: PBS's "The NewsHour" and "Charlie Rose" on Monday last week, ABC's "This Week With George Stephanopoulos" this past Sunday. Someone has even cut a rock video on YouTube: "Hey, Paul Krugman, why aren't you in the administration?" A singer croons, "Hey, Paul Krugman, where the hell are you, man? We need you on the front lines, not just writing for The New York Times." (And the cruel chorus: "All we hear [from Geithner] is blah, blah, blah.")


Krugman is not likely to show up in an administration job in part because he has a noble--but not government-career-enhancing--history of speaking truth to power. With dry humor, he once told a friend the story of attending an economic summit in Little Rock after Bill Clinton was elected president in 1992. As the friend recounted the story to NEWSWEEK, "Clinton asked Paul, 'Can we have a balanced budget and health-care reform?'--essentially, can we have it all? And Paul said, 'No, you have to be disciplined. You have to make choices.' Then Paul says to me (deadpan), 'That was the wrong answer.' Then Clinton turns to Laura Tyson and asks the same questions, and she says, 'Yes, it's all possible, you have your cake and eat it too.' And then [Paul] says, 'That was the right answer'." (Tyson became chairman of Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers; she did not respond to requests to comment.) Krugman confirmed the story to NEWSWEEK WITH a smile. "I'm more tolerant now," he says. But at the time, he was bitter that he was kept out of the Clinton administration.


New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has been one of the most vocal critics of the Obama administration's bank bailout plan. As the Financial Times noted Friday, Krugman is one of the "many prominent...
New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has been one of the most vocal critics of the Obama administration's bank bailout plan. As the Financial Times noted Friday, Krugman is one of the "many prominent...
 
Comments
3966
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Next › Last » (54 pages total)
- goldgoose I'm a Fan of goldgoose 5 fans permalink
photo

If the banks were nationalized, who would be to blame for bonuses? Who would get bonuses? If the banks were nationalized and belonged to the people, then all the people would want bonuses!
Long live the people! Up the bonus!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 AM on 03/29/2009
- ekoorb I'm a Fan of ekoorb 8 fans permalink

It would generate many more problems than solutions. I'm sure anyone who had been an "insider" would be rendered unqualified to manage. Would we have the professors running the banks? On a "temporary" basis. We know how polluted the political process has become. I can see the Republicans gaining power and filling our banks with Brownies. A lot of capital would simply go to foreign banks. Our sterling reputation for political stability would be kaput.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
photo

We need regulators. We could put in other bankers for the job -- with complete transparency and accountability. Leaving the same people in place to clean up the mess they made is lunacy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
photo

Bonuses? That's what you're worried about? If we took over these banks, the bonuses shouldn't and wouldn't be paid. To anyone. Moreover, shareholders would be wiped out and bondholders take a haircut.

But then, that's part of Geithner's "plan" --protecting equity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 AM on 03/29/2009
- yappnmutt I'm a Fan of yappnmutt 75 fans permalink

krugman is a quack. he's late to the party but as long as his economics soul makes an appearance and peopel pander to him for the moment then let him be the one to tell everyone, "i told you,so." the rest of us could give a hoot. just knowing we were right and right from the beginning is enough.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 AM on 03/29/2009
- platanoman I'm a Fan of platanoman 28 fans permalink
photo

Krugman even admitted that Nationalization will cost a lot. He said Obama's health care plan is naive. Why doesn't he offer some solutions for crying out loud

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 AM on 03/29/2009
- marthlois I'm a Fan of marthlois 27 fans permalink

He's been on an ego high for a long time. I respect a lot of his opinions. But as far as I'm concerned, his opposition is beginning to sound like nothing but fear mongering and we sure don't need more of that. There's a way to take your place in helping the country and the administration. At this point, however, he's getting a lot of attention while he acts like a very big bull in a china shop.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 AM on 03/29/2009
- UNCLEJOE I'm a Fan of UNCLEJOE 56 fans permalink
photo

Krugman has complaints but no solution.
Rubini doesn't dismiss Geithner plan entirely, but offers a workable more humane solution starting from the bottom up; helping the home owners maintain their homes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 AM on 03/29/2009
- JolieN I'm a Fan of JolieN 4 fans permalink

It's easy to criticize than to come up with a solution. You can spend time planning the whole trip for your family and if one thing goes wrong, it's your fault. Others who did no work, never be at fault. By not participating or be part of the team, he can be the outsider to point out what wrong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

ztck5356 notes:

He (Krugman) gets paid to criticize presidents. That's what he does.

Posted 01:03 AM on 03/29/2009
----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­------

I suppose he is the only person in America who makes money that way.

And of course, the last thing America needs is somebody who can build a coherent critique of an Admin's economic policies. Yeah.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 AM on 03/29/2009

He's got the right to his opinions but it's mental masturbation unless he wishes to work within the system instead of in opposition of it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

twistedknickers asks:

What is a woowoo? I'm kind of new to this.

Posted 12:53 AM on 03/29/2009
----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­------

A group of loonies who cannot for the life of them fail to buy into any conspiracy theory that comes by them.

http://www.ilovebonnie.net/tinfoil-hat.jpg

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
photo

It's a derogatory smear tactic on the part of some who are heavily into denial.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Yawn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 AM on 03/29/2009

Well I find it rude and counterproductive. Again just my opinion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:10 AM on 03/29/2009

Thanks for the clarification. While I don't post very often, I have been reading Carolab's posts for a while now and she really doesn't strike me as a loonie. Just my opinion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Yer entitled. She is not the worst of the breed, and can actually form a sentence and a paragraph, but in the end, she is wild for conspiracy theories.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:10 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Ohsherri writes:

Krugman is out for Krugman.
He's looking for his next gig.

Posted 12:50 AM on 03/29/2009
----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­--

Gee. As opposed to your whole sack cloth and ashes gig.

What is he supposed to do? Live in a cave?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 AM on 03/29/2009

Would not, should not President Obama welcome this loyalty, this critical thinking? I know it might pain him, but it is important and he will not reject Paul Krugman's critical thinking. He will probably read it and think about it! Perhaps, they should sit together and debate, have a real conversation. Think together and respectfully disagree or agree, but appreciate the focus. Just do that, don't tell anyone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 AM on 03/29/2009
- KofTX I'm a Fan of KofTX 22 fans permalink
photo

And make Krugman's have an ego attack? The last thing the President needs is more ego-driven, ideologically possessed critics on the right or the left.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

I don't think either of you have a bead on either of those two men.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 AM on 03/29/2009
- ztck5356 I'm a Fan of ztck5356 19 fans permalink
photo

Paul Krugman is good at being impartial. He criticizes ALL presidents. That's his basis for an article. Pick a president and criticize his policies.
He criticized Reagan, Clinton, Bush and now Obama.

Maybe he should run for president and show us how he would do in the hot seat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
photo

And Reagan, Clinton and Bush were not worthy of criticism?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 03/29/2009
- ekoorb I'm a Fan of ekoorb 8 fans permalink

I'm sure he's realized that the theoretical has its advantages.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 AM on 03/29/2009
- Jezreel I'm a Fan of Jezreel 62 fans permalink
photo

Not only has he criticized all presidents, he's also criticized all treasury secretaries. Apparently, according to Krugman any position other than his own is not credible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Maybe pigs will fly at supersonic speeds.

Krugman getting elected! Hah!

Paul is many things, but the first Jewish president is not among them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 03/29/2009
- marthlois I'm a Fan of marthlois 27 fans permalink

There you go - was he ever asked to serve in the cabinet or as an advisor for any of those
Presidents? If not, we should all be asking ourselves why????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Ohsherri writes:

I'm making a point that Krugman worked for Enron.
Very fair.
Very Sane.
Posted 12:24 AM on 03/29/2009
----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­---

Everybody who ever received a check from Enron is the moral equivalent of Joseph Mengele?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 AM on 03/29/2009
- platanoman I'm a Fan of platanoman 28 fans permalink
photo

Brad Delong was correct. Geithner is not a guy who worked on wallstreet. He's a bureaucrat­/policymak­er. I would like to know first who are the solvent banks then we can think about nationalization.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
photo

Geithner was the head of the NY Fed while it had powers of "umbrella regulation" over the markets--granted to it post the gutting of Glass-Steagall and Shad-Johnson.

You want this same Fed man to grant the Fed more power over Treasury?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 AM on 03/29/2009

Not really.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 03/29/2009
- KofTX I'm a Fan of KofTX 22 fans permalink
photo

Geithner isn't proposing to give more power to the Fed, unlike other former Goldman Sachs big wigs. He is proposing that the new regulatory power be housed in the Treasury Department itself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 AM on 03/29/2009
- jefflorida I'm a Fan of jefflorida 4 fans permalink

krugman's critique, imo, uses nationalization of insolvent banks (and by extension other financial intermediaries) as a temporary (maybe two to five years) way to remove the black hole assets from a bank. the rest of the bank, which especially after reducing its stock and bonds to a lower value (perhaps zero) and clawing back some (perhaps all) of bonuses on fake profits, would be solvent and probably profitable. thus new stock and bonds could be sold with the proceeds reimbursing the treasury for some of the expense of taking the bad assets and working them out, if possible (the fdic does this all the time with smaller banks). on this basis most insolvent banks would produce new, solvent banks. i don't think krugman is proposing the government take ownership and operation of the banks in the classic sense of "nationalizing" an industry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Ohsherri writes:

I'm making a point that Krugman worked for Enron.
Very fair.
Very Sane.

Posted 12:24 AM on 03/29/2009
----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­--------

Everybody who ever received a check from Enron is the moral equivalent of Joseph Mengele?

What freaking difference does it make that he did some work for Enron? Is he somehow responsible for Enron's collapse?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 AM on 03/29/2009
- Ohsherri I'm a Fan of Ohsherri 104 fans permalink
photo

No , but he lives in a bubble. Another fantasy world.
A big talker.
A good frequent guest.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

So your hammering on his work for Enron is intellectually dishonest.

It means nothing, has no bearing on today's issues, and you know that full well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 AM on 03/29/2009
- HMDMSR I'm a Fan of HMDMSR 49 fans permalink
photo

Big Banks Pull off the Ultimate Bait & Switch, by Rolfe Winkler

By February, it was understood that the big banks are all insolvent, certainly Citi and BofA. To deal with them, consensus among the cognoscenti was finally tending to a proper recapitalization: wiping out shareholders and forcing losses onto creditors via debt-for-equity swaps. Call it nationalization, call it preprivatization, call it FDIC receivership, it was clear that losses had to be recognized and by those to whom they properly belong: investors across the capital structure.

But no one really wanted to do this, not in Congress and certainly not in the Obama administration, where Timmy Geithner has made clear that his priority isn't a cleansed banking sector, it's a privately-owned one. For obvious reasons the banks don't like this solution either. So they offered up their self-serving b.s. regarding January and February, buying just enough time for Congress/Bernanke to badger FASB into changing mark-to-market rules and for Geithner to roll out his private-public partnership plan.

http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/03/guest-post-big-banks-pull-off-ultimate.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
photo

"Timmy Geithner has made clear that his priority isn't a cleansed banking sector, it's a privately-owned one..."

Yup.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 03/29/2009
- jefflorida I'm a Fan of jefflorida 4 fans permalink

krugman and stiglitz are not suggesting replacing a privately-owned banking sector with a publicly-owned one, imo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 AM on 03/29/2009
- jefflorida I'm a Fan of jefflorida 4 fans permalink

let's not misunderstand the issue of public vs. private ownership. the toxic assets would be temporarily owned by the taxpayers. the rest of the bank would be resold to new, private investors, conceivably some of the same ones who previously owned it (of course they have to buy the stock or bonds again). paulson, geithner, summers, et. al. not only want the financial sector privately owned and operated, they want it owned and operated by the same people who own and operate it now. that is the true sticking point. the to do over mark to market is of some but not overwhelming significance: whether or not the accounting conventions require recognizing the losses on the books, the market has some idea of relative danger (possibly even exaggerated since it's a bear market) and will act accordingly. lehman, bear, merrill, countrywide, etc. never marked to market and they still went bust. japan's experience in the '90's is instructive: they tried the same thing as paulson/geithner and it never worked well. and the rest of the world was in an expansion then, not a brutal recession.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 AM on 03/29/2009

VIDEO: The Solution to the Economic Crisis. Credit as a Public Utility:

by Richard C. Cook

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=COO20090328&articleId=12932

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:37 AM on 03/29/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 162 fans permalink
photo

President Obama has surrounded himself with Bilderberg swine why accept their agenda of enslavement through endless debt..?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Wow. What kind of deranged Puritan do you have to be for Krugman to not be far enough left?

Krugman is doing Obama a favor. He is giving Obama cover for his relatively left-wing policies. Which are actually relatively moderate, but Lush and SheYawn are never going to understand that.

For the less engaged observers out there, the sight of Krugman saying that Obama is too moderate will give them comfort. In fact, Krugman is perhaps the best spokesman for Obama's policies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
photo

So, is that what Stiglitz, Roubini, Galbraith, et al are doing? Providing cover?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Whatever makes you happy, woowoo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 AM on 03/29/2009
- jefflorida I'm a Fan of jefflorida 4 fans permalink

obama may be both relatively left-wing, say in atmospherics (iran video, not busting pot clinics), and relatively moderate, say in financial crisis policy (the most important thing going currently), but krugman's critique is serious and not in any way a trivial, nit-picking quibble on economic nuance nor cover for obama's deeply misconceived financial crisis policy, imo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 AM on 03/29/2009
- markproulx I'm a Fan of markproulx 4 fans permalink

It is vitally important that Paul Krugman continue his advocacy for economic fairness and sanity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 AM on 03/29/2009
- Ohsherri I'm a Fan of Ohsherri 104 fans permalink
photo

at Enron.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 03/29/2009
- kevenseven I'm a Fan of kevenseven 501 fans permalink
photo

Um. Enron does not exist any longer. It was in all the papers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 380 fans permalink
photo

Krugman, circa 2002:

My last column, describing techniques of corporate fraud, omitted one method also favored by Enron: the fictitious asset sale. Returning to the ice-cream store, what you do is sell your old delivery van to XYZ Corporation for an outlandish price, and claim the capital gain as a profit. But the transaction is a sham: XYZ Corporation is actually you under another name. Before investors figure this out, however, you can sell a lot of stock at artificially high prices.

http://www.pkarchive.org/column/070202.html

Hmm. Fictitious asset sales.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 AM on 03/29/2009
- Amerigucci I'm a Fan of Amerigucci 12 fans permalink

Krugman consulted for an Enron board for 4 days.

It's astonishing the spin about Krugman. How crooked are you, Ohsherri, to keep spinning a lie?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 AM on 03/29/2009
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Next › Last » (54 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect