Nancy Pelosi said last year that expansion of unemployment benefits would inject so much demand into the economy that it would be one of the best "jobs programs" possible.
Economist Mark Zandi said about three years ago that unemployment benefit checks typically produce a "fiscal multiplier" of such value that they increase output by about $1.64 for every dollar spent.
So this seems like a no-brainer, doesn't it? How about 5 years of benefits for everyone? Why stop there? Let's do 10!
(Of course, if this actually worked in the real world and not just in econometric models, just imagine how fabulously wealthy the French would be!)
Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight
of course these models are static and look at these events in absolute terms. they only stop at simple calculations of the multiplier effect of money injected into the economy. their models never carry through to the longer term aspects.
they see all money as if it was all the same; all good, worthwhile, productive money. all stimulation is not of the same worth. these frozen pictures of the benefits of government spending are mere tricks. much like the projections of the cbo,who only score congressional bills as some great frozen bloc, unaffected by and unaffecting anything else. the wonders of unemployment benefits seen in absolute terms may have a stimulative effect but....
not all money injected into an economy is of the same worth. money taken from the economy in the way of taxes and redistributed as unemployment benefits distort economic decision making and lessens true economic growth (first, in taking money away from the productive cycle and secondly, in supporting and prolonging unemployment itself which is a pathology better cured than fed).
if the benefits come from deficit spending and not taxation, the worth our money and inflationary effects and the ever growing bubble of debt pushed down the road,...well score that will you?