by franky35 » Thu Dec 24, 2009 7:50 pm
ugrant, on WWII spending, I was pointing out that deficit spending prior to and during the war caused increased employment during the buildup and US involvement in the war. Thus, the classical Keynesian view is that the New Deal had insufficient deficit spending, but the massive deficit spending during the war pulled the US out of the Depression. This happened during the war, not after the war. During the Eisenhower years we ran a surplus.
Regarding Bush deficits, they did help the economy during the Bush years. The collapse (or near collapse) of the financial system at the end of the Bush administration was a failure of the private sector (mostly banking and insurance). Even Greenspan admitted that the collapse proved the need for tighter regulation of the markets.
The logic of deficit spending to stimulate the economy is simple. If there are 100 workers and 12 of those workers are unemployed, and if the government borrows money to employ 3 workers, then there will be only 9 unemployed workers. A multiplier effect occurs when a private sector job is created to provide goods and services for those 3 newly employed workers. Do you agree that when we borrow money to hire 3 new workers, we will have at least 3 fewer unemployed workers (at least in the short run)?
[Note the above situation is simplified, of course it is true that some stimulus spending went to tax cuts, some to states so fewer state employees would be fired, and some in incentives to private citizens to buy goods and services (like cars).]
Since you're a Democrat, what policy areas do you prefer the Democrats over the Republicans?
Finally, since you and Sneeze are sooo worried about the deficit. I guess then that you want a return to Clintonomics. Is that right?
And, since the deficit is so important, Clintons tax and spending policies were vastly superior to those of Reagan and Bush I and II since all 3 Republican presidents ran massive deficits in good times and bad. Is that right?
Finally, I'll remark that you have a strange idea that stimulus spending in year 1 creates jobs in year 5 (e.g., deficit spending by Bush created jobs now). Stimulus spending is effective only in the short term - the goal of Keynesian stimulus spending is to kickstart the economy until the private sector recovers. Which goes back to my initial question (which you have avoided), isn't it logical to deficit spend in times of high employment and run surpluses in flush times?