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GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters (Read 1353 times)
goosecat
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #45 - Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:55pm
 
Bobby. wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:22pm:
goosecat wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:16pm:
There are different causes of decreases in living standards just as there are different types of recessions.

My untrained view of Australians more recent decreases in living standards revolves mainly around inflation, including the never even mentioned in child-like financial reporting existence of compounding inflation.

More than any losses experienced via interest rate rises alone is the cost of inflationary pricing affecting every good and service above income increases, particularly for the poorest.

The biggest effects for these people are the inflationary movements of basic food and shelter, mostly caused by inflationary pressures.

High inflation is the single biggest driver of loss of living standards in this country ATM STILL. We fell behind the rest of the world in raising rates and have continued to pay the consequent elongated inflation costs of every good and service. Most fail to truly grasp the permanency of those losses.
Even moving into depreciation of 50% does not ever regain the purchasing power loss (and consequent living standard loss) of the prior 100% inflation etc etc. These losses become backed into society and very difficult and extremely long term to ever actually regain.

High inflation is THE ENEMY of successful economies and living standards. I don't care if we go into a small recession and low percentage job losses via lifting rates to tame it.
I am frankly tired of the likes of Kohler whom has lost the ability in his old age to move outside sheer share market evaluation in reality.



And today:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-05/rba-michele-bullock-more-australians-seek...


More people are seeking help as Australia's economy slows down, RBA governor acknowledges
By business reporter Gareth Hutchens

    Topic:Money and Monetary Policy

Thu 5 Sep


Fight against inflation will take years

Ms Bullock made her comments in a speech to the Anika Foundation in Sydney on Thursday afternoon.

Her speech had the title: The Costs of High Inflation.


The economy grew by 0.2 per cent in the June quarter, and by just 1 per cent over the last year, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

The severe slowdown in economic activity occurred after the Reserve Bank lifted interest rates 13 times since mid-2022 to squeeze high inflation out of the economy.

Underlying inflation is currently running at an annual pace of 3.8 per cent, which is still above the RBA's target of 2.5 per cent.

On Thursday, Ms Bullock said if the engineered economic slowdown kept tracking as the RBA anticipated, inflation could be sitting around 2.5 per cent by the end of 2026.

It's too long.
These living standard losses through inflation will take lucky decades to and may never, be recovered. Continual repetitive income increases above inflation (any guesses on that happening lol) and or big productivity and technology improvements are the only way really to get those losses back. That takes years/decades.
People just don't realise the almost permanent nature of inflationary living standard losses for societies. They are baked in and the longer it goes, the worse the reality.
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« Last Edit: Sep 6th, 2024 at 4:02pm by goosecat »  
 
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Bobby.
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #46 - Sep 6th, 2024 at 4:34pm
 
goosecat wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:55pm:
It's too long.
These living standard losses through inflation will take lucky decades to and may never, be recovered. Continual repetitive income increases above inflation (any guesses on that happening lol) and or big productivity and technology improvements are the only way really to get those losses back. That takes years/decades.
People just don't realise the almost permanent nature of inflationary living standard losses for societies. They are baked in and the longer it goes, the worse the reality.



Each successive Govt. spends more than they receive in taxes.
We are going into more and more debt.

Australian debt clock:
http://australiandebtclock.com.au/

Federal debt -  $1.2 trillion.
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thegreatdivide
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #47 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 11:36am
 
Bobby. wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 4:34pm:
goosecat wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:55pm:
It's too long.
These living standard losses through inflation will take lucky decades to and may never, be recovered. Continual repetitive income increases above inflation (any guesses on that happening lol) and or big productivity and technology improvements are the only way really to get those losses back. That takes years/decades.
People just don't realise the almost permanent nature of inflationary living standard losses for societies. They are baked in and the longer it goes, the worse the reality.



Each successive Govt. spends more than they receive in taxes.
We are going into more and more debt.


Correct.

Quote:
Australian debt clock:
http://australiandebtclock.com.au/

Federal debt -  $1.2 trillion.


Guess what: the federal government's debt is actually the private sector's savings, ie, the government didn't tax back enough to erase the government debt, as you coreectly stated above.

If the government tried to tax the debt back, guess what would happen to private sector savings (household wealth)?
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thegreatdivide
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #48 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 11:48am
 
goosecat wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:55pm:
Bobby. wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:22pm:
goosecat wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:16pm:
There are different causes of decreases in living standards just as there are different types of recessions.

My untrained view of Australians more recent decreases in living standards revolves mainly around inflation, including the never even mentioned in child-like financial reporting existence of compounding inflation.

More than any losses experienced via interest rate rises alone is the cost of inflationary pricing affecting every good and service above income increases, particularly for the poorest.

The biggest effects for these people are the inflationary movements of basic food and shelter, mostly caused by inflationary pressures.

High inflation is the single biggest driver of loss of living standards in this country ATM STILL. We fell behind the rest of the world in raising rates and have continued to pay the consequent elongated inflation costs of every good and service. Most fail to truly grasp the permanency of those losses.
Even moving into depreciation of 50% does not ever regain the purchasing power loss (and consequent living standard loss) of the prior 100% inflation etc etc. These losses become backed into society and very difficult and extremely long term to ever actually regain.

High inflation is THE ENEMY of successful economies and living standards. I don't care if we go into a small recession and low percentage job losses via lifting rates to tame it.
I am frankly tired of the likes of Kohler whom has lost the ability in his old age to move outside sheer share market evaluation in reality.



And today:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-05/rba-michele-bullock-more-australians-seek...


More people are seeking help as Australia's economy slows down, RBA governor acknowledges
By business reporter Gareth Hutchens

    Topic:Money and Monetary Policy

Thu 5 Sep


Fight against inflation will take years

Ms Bullock made her comments in a speech to the Anika Foundation in Sydney on Thursday afternoon.

Her speech had the title: The Costs of High Inflation.


The economy grew by 0.2 per cent in the June quarter, and by just 1 per cent over the last year, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

The severe slowdown in economic activity occurred after the Reserve Bank lifted interest rates 13 times since mid-2022 to squeeze high inflation out of the economy.

Underlying inflation is currently running at an annual pace of 3.8 per cent, which is still above the RBA's target of 2.5 per cent.

On Thursday, Ms Bullock said if the engineered economic slowdown kept tracking as the RBA anticipated, inflation could be sitting around 2.5 per cent by the end of 2026.

It's too long.
These living standard losses through inflation will take lucky decades to and may never, be recovered. Continual repetitive income increases above inflation (any guesses on that happening lol) and or big productivity and technology improvements are the only way really to get those losses back. That takes years/decades.
People just don't realise the almost permanent nature of inflationary living standard losses for societies. They are baked in and the longer it goes, the worse the reality.


All good points made by 'goosecat'.

...except the comment re Alan Kohler, who knows government deficits and debts per se are not necessarily inflationary, excessive real purchasing power (beyond the productive capacity of the economy) IS inflationary.

So - how to restrain excessive purchasing power  without the blunt tool of interest rate rises which harm the least well off, that is the question.   


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freediver
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #49 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 1:03pm
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 12:41pm:
freediver wrote on Sep 5th, 2024 at 4:05pm:
TGD:
Mainstream flat-earth economists say population increase increases demand and consumption, and hence GDP.


It does. But like the author, you completely miss the point.


Which is...?


They don't all say it is a good thing. That is an assumption made by some journalists and communist propagandists.

The broader point is that you have no clue what mainstream economics says.
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thegreatdivide
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #50 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 1:24pm
 
freediver wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 1:03pm:
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 12:41pm:
freediver wrote on Sep 5th, 2024 at 4:05pm:
TGD:
Mainstream flat-earth economists say population increase increases demand and consumption, and hence GDP.


It does. But like the author, you completely miss the point.


Which is...?


They don't all say it is a good thing. That is an assumption made by some journalists and communist propagandists.


You mean economists with their "well established principles" are divided? Note:  your first sentence contradicts the second.

FYI the mainstream want continuous growth; they along with uni chancellors, want inceasing overseas students...and contibuing high immigration, regardles of the downsides. (Eslake wants "highly skilled immigation" ie stealing talent from the rest of the world.  Nice). 

Quote:
The broader point is that you have no clue what mainstream economics says.


To repeat the mainstream neoclassical dogma:

Economcs studies the  distribution of 'limited' resources in the face of 'unlimted wants'.

It's obsolete BS; there is no REAL shortage of essential resources in our modern AI and IT production systems.

Only the 'gimme more' of greedy conservatives.   
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Bobby.
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #51 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 3:18pm
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 11:36am:
Bobby. wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 4:34pm:
goosecat wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:55pm:
It's too long.
These living standard losses through inflation will take lucky decades to and may never, be recovered. Continual repetitive income increases above inflation (any guesses on that happening lol) and or big productivity and technology improvements are the only way really to get those losses back. That takes years/decades.
People just don't realise the almost permanent nature of inflationary living standard losses for societies. They are baked in and the longer it goes, the worse the reality.



Each successive Govt. spends more than they receive in taxes.
We are going into more and more debt.


Correct.

Quote:
Australian debt clock:
http://australiandebtclock.com.au/

Federal debt -  $1.2 trillion.


Guess what: the federal government's debt is actually the private sector's savings, ie, the government didn't tax back enough to erase the government debt, as you coreectly stated above.

If the government tried to tax the debt back, guess what would happen to private sector savings (household wealth)?



It's got too far out of control now -
I don't think anyone knows what to do.
They could start by halving public servant wages?

Plenty of public servants on $1 million or more per year.
Cancel AUKUS?
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whiteknight
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #52 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 3:24pm
 
How can we afford AUKUS?.  What on earth were they thinking?.   Sad
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Bobby.
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #53 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 3:29pm
 
whiteknight wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 3:24pm:
How can we afford AUKUS?.  What on earth were they thinking?.   Sad



It was worked out on the back of a beer coaster at a pub in Canberra.

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goosecat
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #54 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 4:06pm
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 11:48am:
goosecat wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:55pm:
Bobby. wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:22pm:
goosecat wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 3:16pm:
There are different causes of decreases in living standards just as there are different types of recessions.

My untrained view of Australians more recent decreases in living standards revolves mainly around inflation, including the never even mentioned in child-like financial reporting existence of compounding inflation.

More than any losses experienced via interest rate rises alone is the cost of inflationary pricing affecting every good and service above income increases, particularly for the poorest.

The biggest effects for these people are the inflationary movements of basic food and shelter, mostly caused by inflationary pressures.

High inflation is the single biggest driver of loss of living standards in this country ATM STILL. We fell behind the rest of the world in raising rates and have continued to pay the consequent elongated inflation costs of every good and service. Most fail to truly grasp the permanency of those losses.
Even moving into depreciation of 50% does not ever regain the purchasing power loss (and consequent living standard loss) of the prior 100% inflation etc etc. These losses become backed into society and very difficult and extremely long term to ever actually regain.

High inflation is THE ENEMY of successful economies and living standards. I don't care if we go into a small recession and low percentage job losses via lifting rates to tame it.
I am frankly tired of the likes of Kohler whom has lost the ability in his old age to move outside sheer share market evaluation in reality.



And today:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-05/rba-michele-bullock-more-australians-seek...


More people are seeking help as Australia's economy slows down, RBA governor acknowledges
By business reporter Gareth Hutchens

    Topic:Money and Monetary Policy

Thu 5 Sep


Fight against inflation will take years

Ms Bullock made her comments in a speech to the Anika Foundation in Sydney on Thursday afternoon.

Her speech had the title: The Costs of High Inflation.


The economy grew by 0.2 per cent in the June quarter, and by just 1 per cent over the last year, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

The severe slowdown in economic activity occurred after the Reserve Bank lifted interest rates 13 times since mid-2022 to squeeze high inflation out of the economy.

Underlying inflation is currently running at an annual pace of 3.8 per cent, which is still above the RBA's target of 2.5 per cent.

On Thursday, Ms Bullock said if the engineered economic slowdown kept tracking as the RBA anticipated, inflation could be sitting around 2.5 per cent by the end of 2026.

It's too long.
These living standard losses through inflation will take lucky decades to and may never, be recovered. Continual repetitive income increases above inflation (any guesses on that happening lol) and or big productivity and technology improvements are the only way really to get those losses back. That takes years/decades.
People just don't realise the almost permanent nature of inflationary living standard losses for societies. They are baked in and the longer it goes, the worse the reality.


All good points made by 'goosecat'.

...except the comment re Alan Kohler, who knows government deficits and debts per se are not necessarily inflationary, excessive real purchasing power (beyond the productive capacity of the economy) IS inflationary.

So - how to restrain excessive purchasing power  without the blunt tool of interest rate rises which harm the least well off, that is the question.   



I wasn't referring to Kohlers opinion of gov debt, which I should have made clear.
I was referring to his constant whinging regarding interest rate rises, RBA and GDP growth reduction.

I know his mindset; He sees these realities through a share-market investment lens centred on GDP growth being good for business and share prices generally.
He was one of many investor "experts" whinging and predicting absolute economic death and share market loses if the RBA kept raising rates back when we were still in the 2% range.

You need to be able to understand his personal bias to one particular narrow thought process that he at various times tries to expand on for media career sake, but habitually falls back into as his economic measuring stick for all things.
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freediver
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #55 - Sep 7th, 2024 at 4:09pm
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 1:24pm:
freediver wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 1:03pm:
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 12:41pm:
freediver wrote on Sep 5th, 2024 at 4:05pm:
TGD:
Mainstream flat-earth economists say population increase increases demand and consumption, and hence GDP.


It does. But like the author, you completely miss the point.


Which is...?


They don't all say it is a good thing. That is an assumption made by some journalists and communist propagandists.


You mean economists with their "well established principles" are divided?


Not on matters of economics. At least not with the fundamentals. But they don't all like the same breakfast cereal. This is all made very clear in an introductory economics course. Particularly a macroeconomics one - because it is a mistake so often made by people pretending to understand economics.
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People who can't distinguish between etymology and entomology bug me in ways I cannot put into words.
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thegreatdivide
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #56 - Sep 8th, 2024 at 12:53pm
 
goosecat wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 4:06pm:
I wasn't referring to Kohlers opinion of gov debt, which I should have made clear.
I was referring to his constant whinging regarding interest rate rises, RBA and GDP growth reduction.


Kohler is thoroughly acquainted with MMT, (including personally communicating with prof. Bill Mitchell, a leading heterodox economist), and even presented key MMT propositions in an article he published in 'The Australian' some years back when the GFC was threatening to destroy the global economy.

That's why he "whinges" about RBA monetary policy and
"GDP growth reduction" (not sure what you mean by that; even mainstream economists acknowledge the qualitative limitations re GDP.    

Quote:
I know his mindset; He sees these realities through a share-market investment lens centred on GDP growth being good for business and share prices generally.


He has changed his views since his contact with MMT; eg he knows a currency-issuing government can always defeat "bond vigilantes" if the nation remains productive, however large the national public debt. (eg, bond traders have been betting against the BofJ for ages (because of Japan's massive public debt), and keep losing their shirts).

Quote:
He was one of many investor "experts" whinging and predicting absolute economic death and share market loses if the RBA kept raising rates back when we were still in the 2% range.


And guess what: if in fact Lowe and now Bullock HAVE set in motion the processes that will "smash the economy"  (via >4% interest rates), share markets will crash.  But in any case, ordinary people (renters without savings and late-comer mortgagees ARE being smashed NOW by high interest rates which are supposed to contain inflation.

Quote:
You need to be able to understand his personal bias to one particular narrow thought process that he at various times tries to expand on for media career sake, but habitually falls back into as his economic measuring stick for all things.


Correct, so find out how Kohler's ideas are evolving eg
In 2020:

https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/melbourne-saturdaymornings/alan-kohler-ex...

It’s ok to print money: Alan Kohler

...written in 2020, at the start of the pandemic; since then, the resistance of the mainstream to MMT has seen Kohler cease his promotion of MMT, while still understanding that  debt is immaterial to a currency-issuer, so long as the nation's resources and productive capacity are sufficient.

His more recent view (in 2024)

https://www.thenewdaily.com.au/finance/2024/04/01/alan-kohler-monetary-theory

Alan Kohler: Modern Monetary Theory has become modern fiscal practice

A few years ago everybody was talking about Modern Monetary Theory, both ardently for and scornfully against, but nobody was doing it.

Now everybody is doing it but hardly anybody is talking about it, apart from American economist Stephanie Kelton, promoting a film on the subject.

Doing what, exactly? Governments are showing by their deeds that deficits and debt don’t matter.

Global government debt has hit a record high of $US82 trillion, more than double what it was before the GFC, and no sign of slowing since the end of the pandemic.

The world’s governments, in aggregate, haven’t managed a surplus for 20 years, and even then, it was small and brief.

MMT is not mentioned by name, but its prime heresy – that deficits don’t matter – has become gospel.

Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers will soon announce his second surplus, but the government’s long-term forecasts show a return to deficits that last at least 10 years. If they thought it mattered, politically or economically, they wouldn’t.

In the United States the Congressional Budget Office is also projecting deficits forever, with endlessly rising government debt.

There is no serious objection to this, but there hasn’t been a mass public conversion to MMT, so what’s changed?


.......

But what Kohler doesn't say is public debt is still preached as an evil (by mainstream economists and mainstream media) to the vast unknowing electorate who think government debt is like their own household debt - which they want to pay-off ASAP; so in fact there IS "serious objection" - at least in the vast ignorant electorate - to the idea government debt doesn't matter.

See the complete Kohler article in the MMT thread:

https://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1645944963/960#969

#969i





 






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« Last Edit: Sep 8th, 2024 at 1:13pm by thegreatdivide »  
 
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Bobby.
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #57 - Sep 8th, 2024 at 1:44pm
 
TGD,
Quote:
MMT is not mentioned by name, but its prime heresy – that deficits don’t matter – has become gospel.

Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers will soon announce his second surplus, but the government’s long-term forecasts show a return to deficits that last at least 10 years. If they thought it mattered, politically or economically, they wouldn’t.

In the United States the Congressional Budget Office is also projecting deficits forever, with endlessly rising government debt.

There is no serious objection to this, but there hasn’t been a mass public conversion to MMT, so what’s changed?



It's scary isn't it?
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thegreatdivide
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Re: GDP / capita falling for six consecutive quarters
Reply #58 - Sep 10th, 2024 at 11:05am
 
freediver wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 4:09pm:
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 1:24pm:
freediver wrote on Sep 7th, 2024 at 1:03pm:
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 6th, 2024 at 12:41pm:
freediver wrote on Sep 5th, 2024 at 4:05pm:
TGD:
Mainstream flat-earth economists say population increase increases demand and consumption, and hence GDP.


It does. But like the author, you completely miss the point.


Which is...?


They don't all say it is a good thing. That is an assumption made by some journalists and communist propagandists.


You mean economists with their "well established principles" are divided?


Not on matters of economics. At least not with the fundamentals. But they don't all like the same breakfast cereal. This is all made very clear in an introductory economics course. Particularly a macroeconomics one - because it is a mistake so often made by people pretending to understand economics.


"Fundamentals" - as claimed by the current manstream guru Greg  Mankiw; here is what Steve Keen has to say (see latest MMT post) 

This makes economics degrees extremely powerful, as Paul Samuelson, the author of the first post-WWII textbook, which set the mould for all its successors, fully appreciated. In the preface to a teaching guide to his textbook, he wrote that:

"I don't care who writes a nation's laws--or crafts its advanced treaties--if I can write its economic textbooks." The first lick is a privileged one, impinging on the beginner's tabula rasa (lit. 'empty slate') at its most impressionable state.  (Samuelson 1990, p. ix)

The "first lick" in one of the dominant economics textbooks today—Greg Mankiw’s Macroeconomics {Mankiw, 2016 #6107}—is a model which teaches students that government spending is a bad thing.[/b]

After laying out the model in the previous 30 pages, Mankiw explains that, according to the model, an increase in government spending reduces investment:

Consider first the effects of an increase in government purchases …  The immediate impact is to increase the demand for goods and services… But because total output is fixed by the factors of production, the increase in government purchases must be met by a decrease in some other category of demand. Disposable income  … is unchanged, so consumption … is unchanged as well. Therefore, the increase in government purchases must be met by an equal decrease in investment.  (Mankiw 2016, p. 73)

Mankiw cautions that there are some “simplifying assumptions” in this model which are relaxed later—such as output being fixed. But this foundational model plants in students’ heads the idea that government spending—say, on giving pensioners additional money for heating during winter—will come at the expense of the future growth of the economy.

The removal of some assumptions in subsequent models doesn’t change the underlying proposition: government spending in excess of taxation harms the economy. This belief, etched on “the beginner's tabula rasa at its most impressionable state”, as Samuelson put it, is why Starmer and Reeves think that letting pensioners freeze will be good for the economy.

In reality, it won’t—not merely because the simplifying assumptions of this model are wrong, but because its fundamental assumptions about what government spending does, how it is financed, and the impact of government spending on private investment, are also wrong. I'll  explain why in the next post.


I already explained the obsolete concepts supporting  Mankiw's neoclassical orthodoxy.




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