The economy isn’t in great shape, but we’re going to avoid Great Depression II, writes Paul Krugman in the New York Times. “What saved us? The answer, basically, is big government.” Unlike the private sector, the government didn’t decrease spending as its income decreased, which kept a whole lot of people employed. “Budget deficits are actually a good thing right now,” he writes.
It also rescued the financial system, albeit clumsily, and kept roughly a million people employed with stimulus cash. And all the while, Republicans have been arguing that the government should get out of the way and let the economy burn. So with "utter catastrophe" narrowly averted, Krugman writes, “Aren’t you glad that right now the government is being run by people who don’t hate government?”
(More government spending stories.)