Mervyn King, Columnist

Economics Needs a Post-Crash Revolution

The Great Depression produced political turmoil and a new approach to economic policy. This time, we’ve got the turmoil but not the rethink.

It changed economics.

Source: Hulton Archive/Getty Images

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A decade ago, we thought the banking crisis was over and the expansion already visible in emerging economies would spread to the industrialized world. There’s been a recovery, but a frustratingly slow one. The International Monetary Fund just lowered its estimate of world growth both this year and next. Every data release seems to bring gloomy news. If the problem before the crisis was too much borrowing and too much spending, then the problem today is too much borrowing and too little spending.

The world economy is stuck in a low-growth trap. The question is why.