25
Apr 14

BE Part II: The Great Recession

The dramatic contrast between Icelandic and Greek responses to financial tragedy explained in this chapter really struck me. Stuckler and Basu did a good job making the public health consequences quite clear–how people’s health in Iceland was pretty stable through the recession, but people’s health in Greece got way worse and continues to be a problem. Because it’s not their point and because evidence is probably less clear-cut, though, they didn’t go into a particularly deep discussion of the effects of financial/public health crises on the social fabric of a nation. From the chapters, it seems like things are pretty solid in Iceland, while Greece’s sense of community is pretty tattered–a predictable response of people feeling continually unsupported and at-risk.

My experiences at Bluestockings support the conclusions about Greece. We’ve had a number of Greek activists and immigrants come to the store to run events on the financial crisis and resulting social crisis going on there, and from what they say, things are real bad. They, as well as many activists here, are very concerned about Golden Dawn (the neo-Nazi party referenced on the last page of the chapter) and the alarming support for it.

This last part is not specific to Greece or Iceland and I’m not really sure how to connect it, but the IMF is distressingly silly. You’d think they’d try to have some more solid reasoning to back up their recommendations–whenever they get involved in a country, the stakes are very, very high. The part about financial multipliers, and how the IMF just guessed that they average about .5 rather than that they vary significantly, struck me as particularly irresponsible. IMF, you know the saying–to assume makes an ass out of u and me.


25
Apr 14

The Body Economics, Part II

Reading Part II of The Body Economics, I found Iceland’s situation to be particularly fascinating.  As a native of the United States, it is difficult to imagine a civilian protest on the same scale as those that occurred in Iceland over the IMF-proposed plan.  As stated in the reading, the Icelandic protests would equate to ten million people in the US gathering together in Washington, D.C.; this would be virtually impossible.  It is also crazy to imagine the US government responding to protest the way the Icelandic government did.  While it may be risky to allow a country’s entire population to vote democratically on an issue as vital as economic policy, I cannot think of a better way to represent the needs of everyone–not just those high up on the socioeconomic ladder.  It is absurd that the whole population should have to pay for the mistakes made by the upper class.  Iceland clearly made the right call, given the   It would be wise for those opposed to deficit spending in times of economic recession–such as Iceland’s wealthy investors–to take another look and see that you not only have to spend money to make money, but to keep your population healthy and productive.


25
Apr 14

Body Economics part II

The stories of Iceland and Greece are fairly parallel up to the point where Greece decides to listen to the IMF and cut spending from the country’s vitals. Iceland is small economy that grew primarily focused on banking, which meant that it was hit hard by the most recent global recession. Its options were simple: stay in debt for a few years while maintaining its high standard for public health and try some government stimulus plans or attempt to fix the debt right away by cutting spending on things the country cannot do without. Thankfully, they chose the first option. However, Greece when confronted with a similar problem, did not. Direct results were seen in HIV numbers. Basu and Stuckler stick to the their theme successfully. Cutting government spending does not work in solving huge government debts. The evidence in these two chapters shows how small countries are affected by the two opposing policies adopted. However, we have yet to see if Iceland’s policy would work in countries that are much larger and have much more complex economies than Iceland in the current attempt to fully recover from recent global recession. Signs point to yes, but either way, it’s clear that the worst thing a government can do is austerity.