The Corner

Krugman Makes the Ponzi Point

Apparently, Paul Krugman once said that Social Security had a “Ponzi game aspect.” Here’s the original link, from the December/January 1996-97 issue of the Boston Review. This was dug up by Tyler Durden and picked up at Verum Serum. It’s particularly remarkable in light of this 2007 op-ed, in which Krugman attacks Sen. Barack Obama at the outset of his presidential campaign for playing into the supposed myth of a coming Ponzi-like crisis in Social Security, endorsed at the time, Krugman says, by those in-the-know in both parties. Krugman gives the examples of Chris Matthews and Tim Russert, but I actually think his more important point in 2007 is that the belief that Social Security is in danger of a Ponzi-like collapse was shared by those in both political parties, liberals and conservatives alike. That is exactly what I argued here.

But assuming this link back to Krugman in 1997 is legit, and it certainly looks that way, then even Krugman has called Social Security a Ponzi scheme — or at least something very like one. Now, let’s dig up those 2007 interviews in which Obama spoke of a Social Security “crisis.” Krugman puts this down to Obama’s attempts to position himself as a moderate for the campaign, although Krugman doesn’t seem to believe that Obama is doing this for much more than show. On that point, at least, Krugman’s on target.

Stanley Kurtz is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.
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