Last
week we mentioned Adam Smith and the possibility that the
political-economist-you-love-to-hate might have gotten a bum rap for the past
couple hundred years or so.
"Consumption is the purpose of production." |
The
anti-Malthusian law of population is that the rate of population growth varies
inversely — and naturally — with the standard of living. Thus, as living
standards rise, the reproductive rate decreases, and as living standards fall,
the reproductive rate increases in response. Confusing cause and effect,
however, many authorities have assumed that rising standards of living are
caused by reducing population growth, not that the rate of population growth is
reduced by raising the standard of living.
Under
the Banking Principle, the amount of money in the system is determined by
production — all money comes from production, as it is the medium by means of
which I trade what I produce for what you produce. Under the Currency
Principle, the amount of money determines production. Thus, under the Banking
Principle you need production in order to have money, while under the Currency
Principle you need money in order to have production.
Keynes: "The Devil made me do it." |
In
Keynesian economics, it is essential that there be great disparities of wealth,
and the more expensive new capital becomes, the greater the disparity must be
in order to provide savings for new capital formation and job creation.
Further, in order to ensure that there is enough savings to form capital, wage
earners must spend all of their income to purchase unnecessary or unwanted, even
useless goods and services in order to generate more profits for the rich. This
is because the presumed need for unconsumed production to provide savings
requires unnecessary production . . . which must be sold to turn it into money
savings. The more useless junk people can buy in the Keynesian paradigm, the
better the economy runs. Consumer credit is a great boon — for the rich,
because it enables people to create money to purchase the excess goods and
services, thereby providing the savings Keynes considered essential.
Of
course, if new capital formation were financed out of future savings instead of
past savings, great wealth disparities, unnecessary production, consumer
credit, and a host of other Keynesian fixes would be unnecessary.
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