Pete Boettke on Cowen’s The Great Stagnation:
The Great Stagnation is a condemnation of government growth
over the 20th century. It was made possible only by the amazing
technological progress of the late 19th and early 20th century. But as
the rate of technological innovation slowed, the costs of government
growth became more evident. The problem, however, is that so many have
gotten used to the economics of illusion that they cannot stand the
reality staring them in the face.
My co-author Steve Miller replies:
I largely agree with Steve the Wise, of course. My one quibble is that there is reasonable evidence in favor of a Slight Stagnation. Herb Stein supposedly quipped that “There is nothing wrong with supply-side economics that division by ten wouldn’t fix.” I’m tempted to make an analogous concession to The Great Stagnation, but reflections on CPI bias and consumption-biased technological change stay my hand.