Market Correction

Again, Lose the "We"
26 January 2009

Editor, Washington Post
1150 15th St., NW
Washington, DC 20071

Dear Editor:

In "Three Crises In One," Robert Samuelson double-counts by identifying "the collapse of consumer spending" and "a trade crisis" caused by Americans now spending less on imports as two separate problems with today's economy (January 26). When consumers reduce their spending they do so for imports as well as for domestically produced goods and services. It makes no more sense to distinguish reduced consumer demand for American-made outputs from reduced demand for foreign-made outputs than it does to distinguish reduced consumer demand for Ohio-made outputs from reduced demand for Oregon-made outputs.

Also, if - as Mr. Samuelson has long contended - Americans earlier saved too little and spent too much on imports, why is it now a problem that Americans are saving more and buying fewer imports? Despite the adjustment costs that such a shift entails, shouldn't we applaud this end to what Mr. Samuelson (and so many other pundits) regard as American consumers' excessive profligacy?

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Chairman, Department of Economics
George Mason University
Posted by Don Boudreaux on Tuesday June 30, 2009 at 10:37am

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