Keynes would not advocate cutting back government spending even if there was a structural debt in times of recession. You've got to bite the bullet and stimulate demand anyway.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
No you don't. Piling even more government spending on top of already very large structural deficits will just add to the problem. You failed to respond to my statement that Japan's practice of doing just that has not worked, and to the statement that the U.S. economy bounced back from the severe recession of 1920-21 even though we dramatically
cut spending as a policy response. How would Paul Krugman explain that?
Indeed, the fact that long term interest rates are at historic lows show that we're nowhere close to our borrowing capacity...
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
It shows no such thing. The reason long-term interest rates are so low is primarily due to looming sovereign debt crises in Greece and a number of other countries, resulting in large quantities of international capital seeking (relatively) safe haven in dollar-denominated U.S. Treasuries. An additional factor is the presence of massive quantities of QE, which drives long-term rates down. That's obviously not sustainable forever. The world does not have an unlimited appetite for Treasury issuance, and if we continue to pile on trillions of dollars more debt, we are going to find that one of these days a Treasury auction is going to go very badly. I believe that is very likely to be our next crisis.
...Yes money supply issues aggravated the spending cuts...
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
What in the world does that mean? How do money supply issues "aggravate spending cuts?" Judging from your previous posts, I'm guessing that you would like to make the case that the 1937-38 recession was largely caused by spending cuts, but the Velde paper you linked (which makes a number of very interesting points, by the way) makes no effort to present such a case. Indeed, it focuses on tax policy as the contributing fiscal factor, not spending cuts (which as I noted earlier were very small). The paper notes that income tax revenue grew by 66% from 1936 to 1937, and that the average marginal tax rate for incomes above $4,000 "almost doubled, from 6.4% to 11.6%" That's a rather large tax increase in anyone's book, and hardly anyone would try to claim that it didn't exacerbate the recession to a significant degree.
Velde also notes that the Roosevelt administration became "increasingly vocal against economic royalists", and that its activities "played a psychological role in increasing uncertainty about the profitability of investment." (Sounds like what's happening today, doesn't it?)
It's been said that optimism and what's been called "animal spirits" plays an important role in generating prospects for economic growth. No less a Keynesian than J. M. Keynes himself said that!
More on the coming European double dip recession/depression:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-10-22/uk-spending-cuts-wont-help-the-us-economy/
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Auerback is a far-left economist who continually rails that the $800 billion "stimulus" package was much too small, and that we need a massive new one. He's in the Krugman camp on that issue, and it's becoming an increasingly lonely place as more and more people are beginning to realize the intellectual (as well as literal) bankrupcy of that economic doctrine.
The rest of what you post is Austrian/Chicago school revisionist history.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
No it isn't. It's what actually happened.