Monte wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
Oh ok. Keynes sucks.
Except when his principles drive the vast majority of the world's successful economies, and even when used in a half-assed fashion can turn an economy from disaster to growth (sluggish though it may be) in less than a year. I'd say this year was a resounding endorsement of Keynesian economic theory.
Not so much as you want to believe. The United States still isn't showing growth despite the fallacious claims of the BLS, the Fed, and the Whitehouse. The durable goods growth for last October has been revised downward three times, with the January revision placing it at negative 0.7% vs the original 0.9% claimed. Durable goods inventory accumulation is still problematic as production continues to wind down and the economy hemorrhages jobs. More importantly, if you needed any proof that we had no growth, even by Keynesian's metrics, last December was it. Aggregate demand was down because inflation (as stated) didn't account for the chained dollar difference in spending from 2008 to 2009. There are all sorts of problems with claiming growth, especially since the basic fundamentals of a stable economy are in horrendous shape in the U.S. right now.
The United States is in the grip of a depression. We're nowhere close to recovery, and things are only going to get worse as unemployment rises and the wage force continues to shrink. There are some natural corrections that CAN come out of the situation, but we'll have to wait until stated unemployment reaches 30-35% before we see that happening. The United States also needs to fundamentally rethink its jobs model and employment paradigms.
That said, the last 3 years have been proof that the Keynesian implementation of the Paradox of Thrift is absolutely invalid. Personal and national savings continue to decline and capital mobility has not produced substantial levies against the cash exodus out of the United States. Even as personal savings rise, the increase in government spending depletes the real capital gains possible in the economy right now. Quite simply, when you throw 1.7 trillion dollars at a problem in 12 months time with no real benefit, no tangible benefit, and no longterm probability of benefit, especially when its all deficit spending, you can pretty much bet that you're backing the wrong horse. The problem with Keynesian political economy has always been the shell game it plays: sooner or later you will ALWAYS outstrip the ability of your currency to inflate beyond the real business cycle.
And, far be it from me to invoke the name of Paul Krugman positively, but that's exactly what his early work showed: Keynesian economics only works if you can export your inflation checks to poor countries. It was an unintended consequence of his work on economies of scale. Now that the U.S. can no longer export its material goods inflation and the rising cost of production to developing nations, it has to eat the full brunt of its inflation on its own. And that means ... we're ****.
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Corolinth wrote:
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