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Originally Posted by GregWeld
I get JP's position on increasing employment - with stimulus - which creates tax income etc. Except that we're still borrowing from Peter to pay Paul and we'll end up with a sore Peter...
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Right, but the fundamental flaw in that premise, is the theory that the govt knows how to spend your money better than you. If that was the case, the govt or the Fed would have never gotten us into this mess or have gotten us out by now. Quite simply, the Congress is very ignorant to monetary policy and the Fed is private, global institution protecting their own interests.
The other argument is investment or stimulus and doing so creates enough prosperity to turn things around. This is also flawed in that yes, you can bail out a failed business, but unless they change their protocol they're going to fail again. It's like giving money to a shopaholic to buy therapy. They will choose to buy something else.
The other HUGE problem is our fiat currency. I think it's interesting that the only thing that gives a $100 bill more value than a $1 is numeral printed on that paper. Fiat currencies always fail. History shows this. It needs to be competing with world currencies and backed by commodities to have value.
Also, I'm feeling the need to dispell the myth that is this "Paradox of Thrift"
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The Paradox of Thrift
The whole idea that saving money is bad for the economy comes from the economist John Maynard Keynes, who referred to it as the “paradox of thrift.” (“Paradox of thrift” and John Maynard Keynes is one of those things you can bust out at a party to seem quite smart.) He believed that if everyone saved more money during times of recession, then demand for goods will fall. If demand for goods falls, then economic growth will stall, causing all sorts of additional economic problems (lost jobs, failed businesses, etc.).
It makes some sense on the surface. If everyone stopped spending money tomorrow, the economy would indeed fall apart. There are two big factors that keep this from happening.
First, when demand falls, prices fall, and when prices fall, people are more likely to spend money. That’s why sales always work – and thus businesses regularly have sales. If demand falls across the board, then businesses will lower their prices to get more customers.
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and...
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Savings Accounts Contribute to the Economy
The second factor – and this is the big one – that makes the “paradox of thrift” fail is that putting money in savings accounts does not remove it from the economy. When you put money in a savings account, it becomes money that the bank can then lend out to businesses. Thus, when more people save, the banks have more resources to pump out to businesses, and when the businesses have more resources, they employ more people, innovate new products, and find new ways to sell.
By saving, you’re actually doing your economic duty, just as you would be if you were buying things. A healthy economy needs plenty of both.
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Taken from:
http://www.thesimpledollar.com/2009/...r-the-economy/