- Messages
- 54,308
airfrogusmc said:So JP then you know the that what Keynes was saying (basically) was what the private sector and the business sector didn't spend the government should make up and that would help the employment problem in that economy. What FDR did was take that money and put people back to work with work programs FSA WPA etc. The conservatives that were in congress didn't think that gov should be involved and started blocking programs. But as WWII proved once the gov put almost everyone back to work either in the military or with defense contractors the depression was over. The theory worked it just took a war to prove it.
I know exactly what that poor excuse for an economist thought. So you believe thisis a good policy?:
In Keynes's theory, general (macro-level) trends can overwhelm the micro-level behavior of individuals. Instead of the economic process being based on continuous improvements in potential output, as most classical economists had believed from the late 1700s on, Keynes asserted the importance of aggregate demand for goods as the driving factor of the economy, especially in periods of downturn. From this he argued that government policies could be used to promote demand at a macro level, to fight high unemployment and deflation of the sort seen during the 1930s.
A central conclusion of Keynesian economics is that there is no strong automatic tendency for output and employment to move toward full employment levels. This, Keynes thought, conflicts with the tenets of classical economics, and those schools, such as supply-side economics or the Austrian School, which assume a general tendency towards equilibrium in a restrained money creation economy. In neoclassical economics, which combines Keynesian macro concepts with a micro foundation, the conditions of General equilibrium allow for price adjustment to achieve this goal. More broadly, Keynes saw this as a general theory, in which resource utilization could be high or low, whereas previous economics focused on the particular case of full utilization."
How is it that it didn't work? Government spending went nuts on all kinds of programs throughout the 30s and we never got "government policies could be used to promote demand at a macro level, to fight high unemployment and deflation of the sort seen during the 1930s." It got worse! By 1937 the economy was in worse shape than before the New Steal! (25% unemployment)
You just admitted that the war ended the depression not the New Steal. Case closed. Who ramped up production and met the demand of an increasing industry? The government? No! It was private industry. The government merely contracted out to private industry with its own money in the form of taxes. If you want to be techical about it, what you actually had in that case was Fascism that worked not Socialism. :eusa_doh: I don't think we want that to be the model of economic theory. Either that or you like the fact that Mussolini made the trains run on time and he too realized that a Fascist military economy brought Italy out of a depression as well. The problem is that that type of economy is based on defeating other nations and risking lives.
No Keynes and Chamberlain had a lot in common aside from both being British. Both didn't realize what they were confronting on paper.
Regards,
J