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kovacs | 4 years ago

Organic demand growth is what we want, not this Frankenstein economy that's been created since at least 2008 if not earlier. Demand doesn't boost GDP, producing real goods and services boosts GDP. You can't spend your way to prosperity despite what any of the insane MMT economists might say.

I agree that wage growth is good but not in the manner it's happening right now, through insanely easy money policies creating massive inflation that's easily outpacing any of those wage gains. Again, you can't print and spend your way to prosperity. Maybe some of these tools would work if they'd ever let off the gas and removed them but that's not what's happening.

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PaulDavisThe1st|4 years ago

> Demand doesn't boost GDP, producing real goods and services boosts GDP. You can't spend your way to prosperity despite what any of the insane MMT economists might say.

I appreciate that you feel strongly on this matter. However, the strength of your feelings are less relevant than the fact that different people (who all know quite a lot about this sort of thing) do not agree with you (or with each other). Calling MMT folk "insane" may make you feel good, but it neither refutes their arguments nor substantiates yours.

fallingknife|4 years ago

MMT does sound like those radio commercials they had back in the 90s saying they would teach you how to "borrow your way out of debt" though.

kovacs|4 years ago

Your comment added nothing of value to this discussion. Replying and telling someone that you appreciate their "feelings" while ignoring the points made may make you feel good, but it neither refutes their arguments nor substantiates yours... if you'd even care to make any.

ren_engineer|4 years ago

how would MMT work in a pre-industrial economy? Technological progress that boosts efficiency is what drives real growth, not economists printing money

paganel|4 years ago

> not this Frankenstein economy that's been created since at least 2008 if not earlier

For what it's worth the US has economically out-competed the European Union in that time-frame, with the US basically following Keynes and the UE going the austerity route most of the time (and only at times, begrudgingly, also following Keynes as a result of the Americans doing it first). There's also China that has out-competed the US and the UE both, but that's another story.

slv77|4 years ago

Both the US and China have paid the costs as that liquidity has flooded into speculative assets such as land which has increased wealth inequality. In addition it likely has resulted in misallocation of capital and a future tidal wave of bad debt.

While households are typically cash constrained economies operating in a fiat system rarely are because cash is essentially created at will by the banking industry. Economic constraints are largely due to the ability to identify, fund and execute in good investments that will provide a reasonable return on capital given the risk.

Is there any investment area in the economy that is currently constrained by the lack of cash?