Khross wrote:
More jobs will only make our problems worse.
That statement is a fact. The problem here, inasmuch as it is a problem, lies in the insufficient economic knowledge of contemporary generations. That is, the vast majority of you still believe the Rooseveltian lies and the myths created by the Federal Reserve Board and Milton Friedman.
I linked the Wikipedia Entry on The Velocity of Money for TheRiov above. Hopefully, a few of you have read it by now. It's rather important for this explanation.
First things first ...
Inflation is almost always toxic. Over time, the actual value of a commodity should decrease, not increase relative to the buying power of a given currency or money.
Remember that, because it's a basic truth. Unfortunately,
inflation and certain methodological considerations are going to defeat that maxim under our current operating model. This is where all the fun complications arise.
In the short term, if you maintain peak monetary movement (that is, you maintain the Velocity of Money), you can offset small amounts of inflation over short periods of time (24-36 months) in terms of absolute dollar savings. Keynes's observation of this came from the German War Debt for World War I. However, even Keynes's was abundantly clear that Germany could not assume the exorbitant and excessively punitive debt the League of Nations levied against Germany. He was also absolutely adamant that such things were short-term solutions only.
Well, the 1930s roll around and the **** hits the fan ...
The U.S. Response to the Great Depression is to ... well, in short, be absolute wrong. In any case, massive bank failures, massive unemployment, massive drought, massive population migration, massive ... just ... economic chaos. At least, that's the picture everyone wants to paint. To be certain, it was not pretty. But it wasn't much different than things are right now.
Over employment, weak savings, declining currency position ...
Irrational stock and bond markets, fluctuating government debt ratings, political and economic uncertainty in places of international interest ...
Declining durable goods production and innovation ...
The neo-Keynesians like to say the United States went through all of this once before, too; that was during the Long Depression of the late 19th Century. But that's not exactly true ... the Long Depression showed growth and expansion during every quarter. It was simply a long correction after the Reconstruction and Westward Expansion era. Plus, influxes of Frontier Resources and Land allowed demand to remain relatively steady in almost all commodity markets and labor needs.
Nevertheless, we flooded the market with jobs, cheap money, and price fixed food during the Great Depression; and we certainly kept at it for way too long. By 1933 international demand for U.S. durable goods was beginning to rise. As political and economic tensions rose, the needs for arms and armaments increased. However, the United States was too busy trying to clean up the mess over-extended Rooseveltian policies created to actually jump full bore onto that re-emerging market. Of course, we also had some minor diplomatic binds in that regard as well. Lacking the ability to fully exploit this market, the U.S. languished a bit longer. More policies complicated the situation and extended the depression, and then World War II happened ...
Well, now we're selling everyone guns and ammo, and almost every human being in the United States is working ... things look **** fantastic on paper, except for the bonds we're having to issue to fund all this production and war-waging. No biggie, if we end the war quickly, we can recover after a short period of austerity.
The war goes on longer than expected (1945) ... the U.S. racks up an enormous debt (albeit modest compared to today) ... and there's a post-war recession that's pretty devastating. The Truman's presidency flounders. Eisenhower pushes us through the Decade of Austerity and actually balances the budget for a single year. (Andrew Jackson is still the last President to pay off the National Debt entirely).
...
(more later)
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Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.