Paul Krugman. (photo: NYT)
Those Lazy Jobless
22 September 14
Last week John Boehner, the speaker of the House, explained
to an audience at the American Enterprise Institute what’s holding back
employment in America: laziness. People, he said, have “this idea” that
“I really don’t have to work. I don’t really want to do this. I think
I’d rather just sit around.” Holy 47 percent, Batman!
It’s hardly the first time a prominent conservative
has said something along these lines. Ever since a financial crisis
plunged us into recession it has been a nonstop refrain on the right
that the unemployed aren’t trying hard enough, that they are taking it
easy thanks to generous unemployment benefits, which are constantly
characterized as “paying people not to work.” And the urge to blame the
victims of a depressed economy has proved impervious to logic and
evidence.
But it’s still amazing — and revealing — to hear this
line being repeated now. For the blame-the-victim crowd has gotten
everything it wanted: Benefits, especially for the long-term unemployed,
have been slashed or eliminated. So now we have rants against the bums
on welfare when they aren’t bums — they never were — and there’s no
welfare. Why?
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