Monte wrote:
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The problem isn't the recession. The recession is the reaction any market has to an inflationary part of the cycle. The inflationary part of the cycle happens when businesses that aren't actually in demand are propped up by things such as artificially low interest rates (i.e. rates set by a central banking system and not in the market) or incenvization, such as tax credits for purchasing certain objects, or subsidizing industry in any number of ways such as 0 interest loans to said industry, tariffs, price fixing, tax incentives for consumers of that industry etc.
Recession is the downward turn in the business cycle, and it absolutely is the problem. Recession causes real suffering for real people.
Recession is not the problem. Recession is the consequence of an inflationary price bubble, which is the problem. That's like telling a person with a bulging artery in his head that his problem is the headache. Your suffering statement is just an appeal to emotion - even if a depression does indeed cause those things, it doesn't reinforce or have anything to do with the characteristics and causes of a depression.
If you maxed out your credit cards to buy a new wardrobe, the problem wouldn't be "I am loaded up with debt with no real good investment to show for it" (unless maybe your career was as a fashion model or something that you could turn a profit from having said wardrobe). That is the consequence of the problem. The problem was you decided to take on debt for no real reason. The consequence is the debt itself. The problem was the choice.
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As Kaynes said - in the long run, we are all dead.
So what? Some people say cucumbers taste better pickled. What the **** does this have to do with anything?
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It could be that the market would eventually work itself out to be flat again, but that's not good enough for thoe of us who have to deal with the ramifications of the downward turn in the cycle.
If it's not good enough, then perhaps we shouldn't have embraced a centrally planned economic policy in the first place that caused us to malinvest in areas that didn't actually produce wealth and jobs that supported those areas.
It's not "good enough" for us to have to deal with gravity either, but the fact is, we do. Your argument is just an appeal to emotions against reality.
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It's lazy economics to look at a downturn and say "no matter how long it takes, and no matter how much damage it does, we must do nothing and let the market work this out for itself." Recessions and high unemployment, when left alone, generally become long term problems that perpetuate themselves.
Generally they do? Are you just trying to leave a backdoor to escape this ridiculous argument you've constructed around yourself? It has nothing to do with "lazy". Economics is a school of study behavior. It does not postulate what policy (or lack thereof) should be implemented. It simply studies the consequence of different action.
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Which is just more irrational "invisible hand" stuff. The market is driven by people's choices. People's choices are rarely based on rationality. The market is not rational, it is not fast to respond. In fact, it's very slow to change course on it's own, which leads to nasty and persistent downturns. Drawing a micro analogy to a macro problem (in the case of your circus analogy) is the issue here.
I don't know how you can even begin to rectify the heinous inconsistencies in your argument. First, you state that the market is driven by people's choices. This is fundamental statement which means an economic system is just the summation of millions of microscopic transactions happening at a rate far too fast to understand in a scope of that detail. Yet later you call it a "macro" problem? What do you even mean by "macro" problem? Do you even know? If it's a "macro" problem, how do you reconcile this viewpoint with the fact that you are declaring the market is a comprised of individual components which ultimately drive its total behavior?
How are people's choices rarely based of rational? Everything is rationalized to the individual, that is the definition of rationalization - it's how individuals make choices. You might mean logic. And that statement doesn't even matter. It doesn't matter how "rational" an economic system behaves. Economics simply studies how it behaves, without some special regard to some absolute framework of "rational" reasoning.
The funniest thing you've said is dismissing the "invisible hand" which is really just a colloquialism for saying that the market is the summation of millions of different entities' interactions, or as you put it "market is driven by people's choices." You are just slinging sledgehammer in the dark - you don't understand what you are arguing against (because you never studied it or what you are arguing for), but you are lashing out at it based on syntax only. You hear "invisible market", so you attack it, then go on to make a statement synonymous with it.
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As I said before, you can't look at running the government like running the household. It's shortsighted and foolish to do so. It's not a household. It's millions of households, and businesses, and foreign interests, etc etc. The biggest problem with the economics of "do nothing" is that it tries to apply micro solutions to macro problems.
I never argued that recession was unavoidable. What I argued is that government has a role in correcting both recession and inflation, and needs to do so vigorously.
I'm not arguing that the government should run anything, like a household or otherwise. You are. And again, you go on to say it's millions of interactions, which I am at a complete loss for how you are trying to reconcile this with the statement with your "macroeconomic" argument. The only thing I can guess is you are getting confused that things of large scale cannot be analyzed by studying the individual components. Well, I have news for you. Anything that is defined by the summation of the interactions of all its inclusive components (fluid mechanics, material mechanics, economics etc.) is and must be analyzed in such a way.
There are no such thing as "micro" solutions, which is completely where you are missing the point. There is no such thing as a "macro" problem, either. As I've stated already several times, and
you have agreed with by way of your very own words, the economy is the summation of millions of interactions.
There is no school of economics of "do nothing". There is a school of economics that believes that the summation of interactions drives the behavior of economy as a whole, which you seem to agree with. As I stated above, economics does not try to understand what policy is best - it tries to understand what are the consequences of different types of actions. It studies a natural system - the system of humans interacting.
Your statement of the problem being "trying to apply'"micro' solutions to a macro problem" is almost embarrassing in its naivety. You simply see two words, that in your mind are antonyms, and therefore assume they must somehow be incompatible, or diametrically opposed.