
By
MADRID — I’m in Spain right now, talking about zombie ideas
 — ideas that should have been killed by evidence, but just keep 
lurching along. In the modern United States, most important zombie ideas
 are on the right, kept undead by big money from billionaires who have a
 financial interest in getting people to believe things that aren’t 
true.
But sometimes zombie ideas also 
manage to eat centrists’ brains. Sure enough, some of the most 
destructive zombies of the past dozen years have shambled their way into
 the Democratic primary fight, where a couple of centrists are repeating
 ideas that were thoroughly debunked years ago.
And
 as it happens, the experience of Europe, and Spain in particular, 
provides some of the bullets we should be using to shoot these 
particular zombies in the head.
So 
let’s start with the origins of the 2008 financial crisis, a topic that 
remains relevant if we want to avoid repeating past mistakes.
Although
 few saw 2008 coming, in retrospect it was a classic banking panic, the 
type of thing that happened frequently before the 1930s. First, lenders 
got caught up in a gigantic housing bubble; then, when the bubble burst,
 much of the financial system just froze up.
What made this 
panic possible, after two generations of relative financial calm? The 
answer, clearly, was the erosion of effective financial regulation over 
the previous few decades.
But
 right-wingers refused to accept the obvious. Instead, they pushed an 
alternative narrative in which liberals somehow caused the crisis by 
forcing poor innocent bankers to lend money to people of color (they 
weren’t usually that explicit, but that was the clear message). This 
narrative was so nakedly self-serving that it’s hard to believe that 
anyone took it seriously; but some influential people bought it. And 
among those people was Michael Bloomberg.
At
 this point the evidence against the liberals-did-it story is 
overwhelming. The surge in bad loans came neither from 
government-sponsored agencies nor from regulated banks, but from 
unregulated mortgage originators. The fallout was so severe because 
investors believed, wrongly, that fancy financial instruments protected 
them from risk.
And, crucially, the housing bubble was an international phenomenon: Spain had a bigger bubble than we did, followed by a worse slump. Did U.S. liberals force Spanish banks to make bad loans?
But
 zombie ideas can’t be killed by evidence. Perpetrators of the 
liberals-did-it lie are still out there, still getting space to spread their disinformation in mainstream media.
Elizabeth Warren argues
 that Bloomberg’s embrace of a false right-wing narrative about the 
financial crisis should disqualify him for the Democratic nomination. 
But I’d be willing to cut him some slack if he’d admit that he was taken
 in by right-wing disinformation. If he isn’t willing to make that 
admission, she’s right.
At the same 
time that Bloomberg is being called out on his housing bubble zombie, 
Pete Buttigieg is facing justified criticism for buying into another 
zombie idea — the obsession with government debt. That obsession did 
much to hobble recovery from the financial crisis.
To
 be fair, deficit panic wasn’t as naked a scam as the claim that 
do-gooders caused the financial crisis, although some of the loudest 
voices decrying the evils of deficits were obvious phonies.
 What happened instead was that many important people imagined that 
inveighing against the dangers of debt made them sound serious, because 
that’s what all the other serious people were doing.
At this point, however, the debt obsession has been thoroughly debunked by both economic research
 and experience. We live in a world awash in private savings looking for
 someplace to go, with investors willing to lend money to governments at
 incredibly low interest rates. It’s actually irresponsible not to put 
this money to work investing in the future, both by building physical 
infrastructure and through programs that help children develop their 
potential.
Now, the Trump 
administration is doing it wrong — borrowing large sums, but squandering
 the money on tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy. But even bad 
deficit spending boosts the economy to some extent, and it is the reason
 America is still growing reasonably fast while Europe, still in the 
grip of austerity ideology, is stagnating.
Look:
 It’s easy to make the political case that Democrats should nominate a 
centrist, rather than someone from the party’s left wing. Candidates who
 are perceived as ideologically extreme usually pay an electoral penalty; this is especially true if, like Bernie Sanders, they actually pose as more radical than they really are.
But
 a key part of centrism’s appeal is the belief that centrists are 
realists, who understand how the world works. It’s much harder to make 
the case for centrists who repeat manifestly false claims, especially if
 those claims were essentially right-wing propaganda.
As
 I said, you can make a good case for the proposition that Democrats 
should, in the end, nominate a centrist. But a centrist whose brain has 
been eaten by zombie ideas? Not so much.
The New York Times 
 
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