Jul 17, 2009

Guy Sorman en inglés, para que lo lea la perrada con síndrome de abstinencia de liberalismo:

In past crises in the U.S. and elsewhere, public spending has never led to recovery. There is not a single positive case of government-induced economic salvation. On the contrary, an excess of public spending usually slows recovery. Why do governments believe that they can spend their way out of a crisis? For one thing they know that the public would resent a government that doesn’t at least pretend to act. Public spending is thus a political choice, without much economic rationale. Many are uncomfortable trusting free markets during a crisis period but the free-market record speaks for itself. Free-market-oriented countries are the most prosperous.

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