What do you think Keynesian economics is?[/quote]Jason Bourne wrote:
My understanding is that it a major component is government intervention in free markets.
Spend and cut taxes when times are tough and tax and reduce deficits when times are good is the simplest explanation.[/quote] I think you're closer to the mark with the latter sentence. Your analysis seemed to presume that Keynesian economics called for extensive government intervention in markets even in boom times, which isn't quite right.
Yeah, same here. I'm a Democrat, and the thing I hate most about my party is the protectionist faction within it.I am not an economic expert though I did spend my first year in college as an economics major. I find the theories can be difficult to grasp. As a free trader proponet most my life I have tended to believe that in a total world open market where we all do whatever we can do best that it does not matter what is produced where.
Considering that most American economists are losing sleep over the possibility of deflation, I'm still not sure that the mild inflationary effects of increased demand for American goods and services would be so awful. Also, there are measures the Fed can take to counteract or mitigate these inflationary pressures anyway.But it also seems with too many dollars abroad that if those dollars flood the US market for scarce goods it could drive up inflation to double digits. Sure it puts money back into the US economy. But what is happnening is the Chinese are buying back from US retailers the stuff they make. Or they may not even bother to ship it to us and just buy themselves,
I'm sympathetic to this idea, but I think a more to-the-point solution would be to keep the prime rate low, because the problem isn't that the dollar is too dear, it's that money is too hard to get. Increasing the money supply would only indirectly loosen credit markets. If we've cut interest rates to zero and credit markets still don't loosen up, I can see an argument for a cash infusion, but the most recent indicators I've seen show that those markets have begun to thaw.It is complex though. And I do agree that currently raising interest rates would be a mistake. It seems that policy right now is to do the opposite of what happened in the late 20s and early 30s. Maybe increasing the money supply will do the trick.
You seem pretty knowledgeable about this. Check out Peter Schiff;s ideas and let me know what you think.
Will do, thanks.