
Europe's problem: bad investments
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Over at Modeled Behavior, Karl Smith points out that Europe's problem isn't just a balance of payments problem. It's a malinvestment problem. If, say, Portugal had borrowed
lots of money in the last decade and invested it in gold, it really wouldn't have a problem at all. It would have a huge debt burden but also a corresponding asset that is liquid enough
to allow it to service the debt. This is small example of a problem overlooked by a lot of macroeconomic types who focus on "aggregate demand," as if the actual things produced
through government sponsored demand didn't matter. But they do matter, a lot. This one of the reasons that government spending can slow the economy. It misdirects spending to political
ends, rather than economic ends. That is, it homogenizes spending, which raises the error cost of investments. Europe's debt plagued governments wouldn't be in such dire shape if
they hadn't spent all that borrowed money on things that they can't or won't sell. _QUESTIONS? COMMENTS? EMAIL US AT_ _FOLLOW JOHN ON TWITTER @ TWITTER.COM/CARNEY_ _FOLLOW
NETNET ON TWITTER @ TWITTER.COM/CNBCNETNET_ _FACEBOOK US @ _