Keynesian policy requires an expansionist Central State and Bank bent on imposing central planning on every level of the economy. Keynesians are natural partners with the neofeudal financial Aristocracy which benefits so enormously from Keynesian print-borrow-blow policies.
Here is the standard Keynesian cargo-cult analysis of our economic woes:
1. The problem is a lack of aggregate demand, i.e. people buying stuff and services.
2. As a result, the economy is running below capacity, i.e. economic output is below potential.
3. The solution is fiscal and monetary stimulus, i.e. the Central State
borrowing and spending trillions on politically directed programs and
the Federal Reserve printing and injecting trillions of "free money"
dollars into the financial sector to boost borrowing and lending.
The cargo-cult program has failed for a number of fundamental reasons. Let's illuminate these reasons with a few thought experiments.
1. If we borrow or print $1 trillion and bury it in the ground, how much demand does it create? Answer:
none, of course; it just sits there, utterly inactive. The Fed has
printed around $2 trillion and made huge sums available to the financial
sector at 0% interest. Most of the funds are sitting in the Fed as
reserves, doing nothing except earning interest for the banks who
borrowed it at 0%.
The velocity of this money is essentially zero: it goes nowhere and does
nothing to stimulate demand. If we print $1 trillion and give it to the
banks to lend to businesses and consumers, but nobody wants to borrow
any money at any price, then it is a equivalent of burying the $1
trillion in a hole. The velocity of money is in a free-fall:
The Keynesians do not understand diminishing returns: the Fed could
print another $1 trillion and that enormous sum wouldn't increase
aggregate demand at all. Heck, make it $10 trillion; the mechanism is
broken and increasing the sum of money available cannot fix it.
2. If we borrow and distribute $1 trillion to households who promptly
buy $1 trillion of
cheap junk from Asia, how much did that "increase in aggregate demand" do to boost the U.S. economy's capacity or output? Answer: very little. A relative handful of workers in the transport sector moved the goods from Long Beach Harbor to Walmarts and Targets around the nation, and the shippers and retail giants skimmed a thin margin of profit from the churn, but the capacity and output of the U.S. economy barely budged because the supply chain for this $1 trillion in "always low prices" low-quality junk lies elsewhere in the world.
cheap junk from Asia, how much did that "increase in aggregate demand" do to boost the U.S. economy's capacity or output? Answer: very little. A relative handful of workers in the transport sector moved the goods from Long Beach Harbor to Walmarts and Targets around the nation, and the shippers and retail giants skimmed a thin margin of profit from the churn, but the capacity and output of the U.S. economy barely budged because the supply chain for this $1 trillion in "always low prices" low-quality junk lies elsewhere in the world.
If some sliver of the $1 trillion bought Apple products, then much of
that money flows through the low-profit-margin Asian supply chain to
Apple's Cupertino, CA headquarters. Corporate profits are nice for the
top 5% who own the vast majority of stocks in the U.S., but once again
they do little to boost capacity utilization.
How much of the Keynesian stimulus has trickled down to the employed bottom 90%? It looks like much of it flowed to the parasitic financial sector.
Keynesian policy requires an expansionist Central State and Bank bent on
imposing central planning on every level of the economy. Keynesians are
natural partners with the neofeudal financial Aristocracy which
benefits so enormously from Keynesian print-borrow-blow policies.
Who handles all that Central State debt? The Wall Street broker-dealers,
that's who. Who gets to borrow money at 0% interest from the Keynesian
Central Bank? Wall Street banks, that's who (you and I don't get that
perquisite). No wonder financial profits have soared under the Keynesian
"stimulus" (The Keynesians have perfected an Orwellian lexicon).
Keynesians don't understand that their policies (deficit spending and low-interest easy money) create speculative debt bubbles. They
also don't understand that post-bubble economies do not respond to more
stimulus (diminishing returns again) because the economy is burdened by
impaired debt and phantom collateral; it is a neofeudal debt-serf
wasteland with few opportunities for business expansion.
No wonder small businesses are evaporating like ice cubes scattered on a Death Valley highway in July.
Employees are not faring any better under the Keynesian jackboot. Wage earners are earning less in the Keynesian regime:
Labor's share of the national income is in free-fall. Once again, the
Keynesian policy is to inflate a speculative credit bubble and then
after it bursts, "stimulate" the debt-serf economy by handing the
financial sector $16 trillion in guarantees, backstops and subsidies and
unlimited access to free money ay 0% interest.
3. With 28% of Americans pulling money out of their 401K retirement accounts to
get by and Baby Boomers desperately working past retirement to rebuild
their stripmined net worth, who is left to borrow the money the
Keynesians gave the banks at 0% interest? Answer: very few. The top 10% are shedding debt, even though they own the majority of the nation's stocks and bonds.
he majority of companies and households that are getting loans are those
refinancing existing debt to lower their monthly payments. Refinancing
might add a thin sliver of demand from reduced interest payments, but
those reaping the modest increase in disposable income might decide to
save that cash rather than squander it, as the Keynesians hoped. Saving
and spending wisely is--horrors!--austerity.
It's difficult to retire on Keynesian promises of the speculative-bubble-bogus-prosperity fleet returning any day now. The cargo cult's chants and dances are getting as tiresome as their grandiose policy failures.Source
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