keynes was a proponent of deficit spending. I don't know if massive deficit spending the last 40 years was what he had in mind.
he should be discredit for that policy.
I'm a private business owner and in the 1%. And nothing in the Republican plan does anything for me, other than cut my taxes at your expense. And you can cut my effective tax rate to zero and I'm not creating any additional jobs unless I sign up more good law suits. Then I'm hiring more help no matter whether my marginal tax rate is 35% or 39.6% (or higher). Originally Posted by TexTushHog
...Keynes was averse to unnecessarily running up government debt in flush times... Originally Posted by TexTushHogExactly!
CaptainMidnight, I know of few Keynesian who would argue that there are not serious structural issues in the economy, although most would put at least one or two of them above the balance of trade accounts... Originally Posted by TexTushHogPossibly, as there's no shortage of structural problems our economy faces. But I don't think many people would argue that our very large negative trade and balance-of-payments deficits aren't extremely serious problems. Another is the very large structural fiscal deficit, especially inasmuch as the currently gridlocked political process means that there's no credible path to anything near balance anytime soon. Still another is our failure to fix the financial system, as Dodd-Frank does nothing about TBTF and little about Fannie and Freddie. Yet another is rapidly-widening income disparity, largely caused by the push toward free-trade globalism begun in the 1970s, resulting in decades of de-industrialization. Most of our recently created "service industry" jobs don't pay very well.