Quote from benwm:
Gordon Brown in the UK also followed the Bush route of running fiscal deficits when times were good. That's a big problem with Keynesian solutions - we only ever get the fiscal deficit side, good times or bad. In the good times when tax revenues are high, they never run the budget surpluses like they're supposed to and start paying down the debt. Where is Keynes then?!
So Keynes is all that's wrong with the world, eh? Certainly its misapplication doesn't add much value on balance. But how exactly did Keynesian economics contribute to the bubble leading to the '29 crash and the various other panics that preceded it?Quote from achilles28:
That's exactly right.
Keynesian economics doesn't work because self-serving politicians and bankers refuse to impose restraint in favor of endless borrow-spend-bail-and juice policies that create wealth-destructive bubbles...
Quote from achilles28:
That's exactly right.
Keynesian economics doesn't work because self-serving politicians and bankers refuse to impose restraint in favor of endless borrow-spend-bail-and juice policies that create wealth-destructive bubbles.
A much bigger problem: America has been reliant on a structural deficit to increasingly bolster GDP for over 30 years. Remove the deficit and the economy would contract easily by 15%.
Quote from Gabfly1:
So Keynes is all that's wrong with the world, eh? Certainly its misapplication doesn't add much value on balance. But how exactly did Keynesian economics contribute to the bubble leading to the '29 crash and the various other panics that preceded it?
Quote from Gabfly1:
As an aside, since corporates can largely be characterized much the same way, that's not exactly a ringing endorsement for laissez faire, eh?
I agree. My comment had nothing to do with the Keynesian discussion that preceded it. That is why I identified the tangent as an aside. Further, your observation supports the reason that laissez faire is flawed at its root even in theory. Again, please note the segue.Quote from achilles28:
...Private economic actors create wealth by acting in their own self-interest. The Government is charged to act in the interest of the common good...
Quote from Gabfly1:
Fair enough. However, and as an aside, would you agree that for that very same reason a laissez faire regulatory environment is equally inappropriate?