Sorry CaptianMignight, it's hard to keep up with which economic heresies of yours I've rebutted in some detail and which slip through unnoticed. There are so many!!
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
You haven't rebutted anything I've posted in a cogent, coherent, or credible manner. And you haven't pointed to a single source credibly claiming the existance of fiscal multipliers greater than 1.0, or to any instance where it is reasonable to believe that such a multiplier worked in the real world. And I submit that you can't, because one doesn't exist.
Suffice it to say that your view of the 1937 Recession is revisonist history that has brought to the fore in recent (last 30) years by economists who have more of a political agenda than they have solid economics credentials. Clearly monetary policy and tax policy played a role, but the lack of a fiscal stimulus follow through from the acceleration of bonus payments to WWI veterans played a huge part, too. Again, Christan Romer, Krugman, et al have told this story far more persuasively than I can.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
The failure to spend enough money has somewhere between little and nothing to do with the onset of the 1937-38 recession. Go back and take another look at the sharp 1920-21 downturn, whereafter the government cut spending and the economy quickly flourished. The notion that recovery needs large doses of government spending is patently ridiculous.
It's quite hilarious to see someone attempt to impugn the economic credentials and supposed political hackery of others while posting links to stuff written by Paul Krugman and Christina Romer!
Romer will forever more be attempting to spin the issue in any way that she feels may put a somewhat happier face on the gross piece of fiscal negligence for which she was partly responsible, as she was one of its leading cheerleaders. And everyone knows that Krugman has simply descended into cheap political hackery. That's why he's become such a darling of you guys on the far left. Barro noted in the piece I linked above that he'll say
anything if he thinks it will bolster a political argument he's trying to make.
As for the "boosting the prosperity" issue, of course it boosts prosperity. It's effects are limited to the short run, but that is the entire point.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Really?
If its effects are limited to the short run, and if it doesn't alter patterns of production or produce anything of lasting value, just how exeactly does it
boost the nation's prosperity?
Let's say you're barely able to make ends meet and you go on a spending spree, buying a bunch of cool stuff you can show off to your friends and filling up your wine cellar -- all by charging up every one of credit cards to the max. Have you boosted your prosperity?
The effects of the sort of "stimulus" we had are you will boost GDP a little bit when you increase spending, and then reduce it as the spending is eventually wound down, relative to what GDP would otherwise have been. That's because government spending, no matter how unproductive or ridiculous, gets tallied in the national income accounts. At the end of the day, you have nothing of any lasting value but have added another big pile onto our debt burden. Now we are finally beginning to realize as a nation that there's a painful price to be paid for years of fiscal recklessness.
The reason the instant case seems so unusual is -- as Lust4xxxLife aptly points out -- Obama's immediate predecessor was so inordinately profligate and irresponsible that his foolishness has made necessary steps taken by his successor look more radical than they are.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Lust4xxxLife quite rightly pointed out that George W. Bush was profligate and irresponsible, but the takeaway I gathered from his post was merely that the whole mess cannot be fully blamed on Obama -- which of course is true. But nowhere did I see him say or insinuate in any way that continuing and expanding those profligate practices were justified. In fact, he clearly said that he shared another poster's pain regarding Omama's bad judgment.
Obama was hired by the electorate to
fix the problems he inherited from his predecessor, not exacerbate existing ones while adding new ones of his own.
We continue to see failed policy proposals pushed by the administration. Just yesterday, Secretary of Agriculture Vilsack said that spending more money on food stamps would provide a boost for the economy and create new jobs. Reportedly he got some hack economist (maybe a junior version of Krugman) to produce some phony analysis indicating that a 1.84 fiscal multipiler would be produced by such a program. That's just bullshit on steroids.
Economics departments at most of our elite universities have long been controlled and dominated by those on the far left of the political spectrum. People like this almost universally support activist government intervention. One tends to believe something if his career advancement depends on it. Those who don't get intoxicated on the Kool-Aid leave and go into the private sector. People like Krugman have been steeped in this sort of stuff since their undergraduate days and have no idea how the economy works in the real world. If any of these people ran a child's lemonade stand they'd probably figure out a way to lose several thousand dollars every day.
How many times do people have to see attempts to stimulate growth with big spending initiatives fail before they begin to understand the problem?