Paul Krugman – Debt History

As part of that long-term project, I’ve been looking at the long-term debt history of the United States, using both the Fed’s flow of funds data (which start in 1952) and the earlier, not quite comparable, data from Millennial Historical Statistics. Here’s what I think is a key chart; it shows nonfinancial private-sector debt as as percentage of GDP: Lire la suite

William Greider – The Democratic Promise of Occupy Wall Street

Regular politics in Washington now resembles an ecological dead zone where truth perishes in a polluted environment. Democrats and Republicans shadowbox over their concocted fiscal crisis, neither willing to tell voters the truth, both eager to avoid blame for the damage they are doing to the country.

Out in the streets, meanwhile, the contrast with brain-dead politics is exhilarating. In Occupy Wall Street, we are witnessing a rare event—the birth of a social movement. Ordinary people are engaging in sustained grassroots protest against the political order and against citizens’ exclusion from the decision-making that governs their lives. They seek to rearrange the distribution of power, and they are doing so by injecting a creative, often playful vitality that has been missing in our decayed democracy. The protesters have slipped around the soul-deadening, high-gloss marketing of mass-communication culture. Instead, they insist that politics starts with citizens talking to one another and listening—agreeing and disagreeing with mutual respect. The open-door, nonhierarchical membership commits people to engage in what historian Lawrence Goodwyn calls “democratic conversation.” Lire la suite

JB Chastand & L Clavreul – Ces patients qui refusent les arrêts-maladie

Le Yéti – « Grande perdition » : seuls les « Indignés » ont la clé

La crise de la « Grande perdition » arrive à son dénouement. L’acte de décès du système relève de l’évidence cruelle. Au point, élément tout à fait nouveau, que les dirigeants qui s’en portaient jusqu’alors garants commencent à lâcher prise et à s’y résigner.

Beaucoup moins de volontarisme dans leurs réunionnites : ainsi lors du mini-sommet de Strasbourg où Sarkozy parla sans trop de conviction de « compromis positif » quand Merkel retoquait sèchement la demande franco-italienne d’euro-bonds et d’intervention de la BCE.

Ainsi encore de l’échec au 23 novembre des négociations entre républicains et démocrates américains au sein de la super commission antidéficit, qui fut accueilli avec une bien molle torpeur par les deux parties, Obama compris. Lire la suite