The tanking economy: Is a spreadsheet error to blame?

In 2010, two Harvard economists made what many thought was an airtight case for government austerity

Spreadsheet
(Image credit: ThinKStock/Image Source)

"Did an Excel coding error destroy the economies of the Western world?" asks Paul Krugman in The New York Times. It looks possible since last week, when University of Massachusetts researchers announced that they'd discovered a simple spreadsheet error and highly questionable statistical procedures in "the most influential economic analysis of recent years." The 2010 paper by Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff made what many thought was an airtight case for government austerity. It asserted that national economies with debt exceeding 90 percent of gross domestic product don't grow; they shrink by an average of 0.1 percent. Their data gave austerity enthusiasts the green light to "slash government spending even in the face of mass unemployment." But the math was bad, meaning that "austerity has been sold on false pretenses."

Actually Reinhart and Rogoff's Excel error "is more of a public relations disaster than a significant slip," says Peter Coy at Businessweek. The UMass researchers claim that GDP grows by an average of 2.2 percent even with 90 percent debt levels, but the Excel goof is only a small part of the difference; most of it stems from how the Harvard and UMass teams weight the data, which is another argument. Even though the UMass researchers acknowledge that higher debt is associated with slower growth, this fiasco "can't possibly be good for Team Austerity."

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Sergio Hernandez is business editor of The Week's print edition. He has previously worked for The DailyProPublica, the Village Voice, and Gawker.