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The GOP Myth of 'Job-Killing' Spending ("Right-wing" WSJ opinion)
WSJ ^ | 6/21/2011 | ALAN S. BLINDER

Posted on 06/21/2011 11:07:03 AM PDT by Qbert

It was the British economist John Maynard Keynes who famously wrote that ideas, "both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed, the world is ruled by little else." Right now, I'm worried about the damage that might be done by one particularly wrong-headed idea: the notion that, in stark contrast to Keynes's teaching, government spending destroys jobs.

No, that's not a typo. House Speaker John Boehner and other Republicans regularly rail against "job-killing government spending." Think about that for a minute. The claim is that employment actually declines when federal spending rises. Using the same illogic, employment should soar if we made massive cuts in public spending—as some are advocating right now.

[Snip]

The generic conservative view that government is "too big" in some abstract sense leads to a strong predisposition against spending. OK. But the question remains: How can the government destroy jobs by either hiring people directly or buying things from private companies? For example, how is it that public purchases of computers destroy jobs but private purchases of computers create them?

One possible answer is that the taxes necessary to pay for the government spending destroy more jobs than the spending creates. That's a logical possibility, although it would require extremely inept choices of how to spend the money and how to raise the revenue. But tax-financed spending is not what's at issue today. The current debate is about deficit spending: raising spending without raising taxes.

[Snip]

In sum, you may view any particular public-spending program as wasteful, inefficient, leading to "big government" or objectionable on some other grounds. But if it's not financed with higher taxes, and if it doesn't drive up interest rates, it's hard to see how it can destroy jobs.

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: collapse; debt; default; economy; keynes; obamanomics; spending; teachers
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To: Sherman Logan

For example, the interstate highway system greatly reduced the cost of movement of people and goods.


But then the ecnomomic law of diminishing returns enters in to the system.


41 posted on 06/21/2011 12:18:00 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple ( getting closer to the truth.................)
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To: NY.SS-Bar9

An excellent essay on creation of wealth by private versus public sectors.

http://www.edlotterman.com/RWE/Articles/20070503.htm


42 posted on 06/21/2011 12:18:50 PM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Qbert
When academia wants to do anything, it’s simple: Raise tuition.

When you have a quasi-monopoly, it is much easier to fleece your customers.

43 posted on 06/21/2011 12:19:26 PM PDT by meyer (We will not sit down and shut up.)
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To: Qbert
Only problem is there was nothing Keynesian about the Obama stimulus. The bulk of it simply went to state, and local, governments to paper over the debt they were running up due to the crash in home values. Despite claiming they were following Keynesian model, the 0 stimulus did not follow the Keynesian school at all.
44 posted on 06/21/2011 12:23:14 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (Giving politicians more tax money is like giving addicts free drugs to cure their addiction)
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To: PeterPrinciple

As it does with all private sector initiatives.

Look, I’m not saying government is always or even normally a more efficient producer of wealth than the private sector. I’m just pointing out that government provides many goods and services we would consider “wealth” if provided by a private entity. I see no reason why these same goods and services should not be considered “wealth” just because they’re produced by the government.

This is actually an argument to make government smaller. If it concentrated on those things only it can do, it could presumably do them more efficiently and produce more wealth in the process. Since it isn’t interfering with the private sector as much, the PS is also able to function more efficiently and generate more wealth.

Win/win. Except for those who think government spending and control is morally superior to spending by the private sector.


45 posted on 06/21/2011 12:25:39 PM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Qbert

Big difference between the Roosavelt, Reagan, and Obama spending sprees. When Roosavelt and Reagan spent money things, useful things, lasting things were built. Dams, bridges, tanks, power plants, tanks, ships, airplanes. many of these are still in use today. What do we get for 0’s 3 trillion dollars? Not one damn thing.


46 posted on 06/21/2011 12:29:27 PM PDT by Drill Thrawl (No one is more against progress than a progressive.)
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To: Doctor 2Brains

Quite true. But the $10 debt is a charge on the future. It isn’t “taken away” from somebody today.


47 posted on 06/21/2011 12:29:38 PM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Qbert
For example, how is it that public purchases of computers destroy jobs but private purchases of computers create them?

I guess this is one of the reasons I gave up my 40+ year subscription to the WSJ.

When a business buys computers for itself, it does so because it thinks that it will increase its net profit by doing so. When the business buys the computers for the government (through taxation and then purchase by the government) its net profit falls by nearly the entire amount of the computer purchase.

Hmmm. Let's see. Which one is better?

ML/NJ

48 posted on 06/21/2011 12:30:02 PM PDT by ml/nj
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To: Sherman Logan

Why do you add the word “today”? $10 dollars of spending is ALWAYS!!! $10 taken by force. Period.


49 posted on 06/21/2011 12:32:34 PM PDT by Doctor 2Brains (If the government were Paris Hilton, it could not score a free drink in a bar full of lonely sailors)
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To: MNJohnnie

Very true.

Johnny Maynard would be very disappointed in how his ideas have been misapplied.

As I understand it, items from his economic theories as to how public spending impacted the economies were utilized to justfy jump-starting a stagnant economy by a sharp-short bump in government spending.

These efforts were claimed to have produced some benefit and, like magic, a whole program of constant government “stimulas” came to be accepted despite its costs and lack of efficiency. The taxes to finance and/or the inflation to print-around that spending became big factors in making econimic cycles deeper and prolonged — the exact opposit of what Keynes would have proposed.


50 posted on 06/21/2011 12:32:42 PM PDT by KC Burke
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To: C. Edmund Wright

“The WSJ felt the need to have a liberal professor write an opinion piece for some reason — and check out this logic by the author:

” Suppose we enacted a modest fiscal stimulus program specifically designed for maximum job creation. My personal favorite is a tax credit for firms that add to their payrolls, but there are other options.”

—I can just see all the gimmicks that would be involved with that proposal.


51 posted on 06/21/2011 12:37:44 PM PDT by Qbert ("The best defense against usurpatory government is an assertive citizenry" - William F. Buckley, Jr.)
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To: KC Burke
Basically the theory worked like this.

City A builds a new road connecting a to b. The economy benefits from the material purchases and the wages paid. it also got a new capital good which would open up new areas to development (new gas stations and shopping centers along the new road) which requires new employees who require new services (dentist, doctor, grocery store etc.

Very little of the 0 Stimulus was stimulative because very little was actually shovel ready jobs but instead was money give to local and state governments to keep union workers employed. Now the money is running out, the economy has not recovered and those jobs still have to go. All the 0 stimulus did was delay the pain.

52 posted on 06/21/2011 12:38:59 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (Giving politicians more tax money is like giving addicts free drugs to cure their addiction)
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To: Sherman Logan
Some government spending creates new wealth. For example, the interstate highway system greatly reduced the cost of movement of people and goods.

You do realize that no government employee helped to build the interstate highway system. Roads are built by private contractors (just as the computers are). The analogy to the government computers vs private computers would be if the roads built were only for government use, which would render them mostly useless.

ML/NJ

53 posted on 06/21/2011 12:42:28 PM PDT by ml/nj
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To: Sherman Logan
You raise good questions, what does generate wealth? Do computers generate more wealth? They have the potential but it depends on how you use them. They have been used to generate a lot of bureaucracy.

Maybe it is an issue of maturity. When the Interstate system was put in, it generated a lot of wealth. But spending on the interstate system now does not, it is a maintenance item that is important but it doesn't generate new wealth when we spend on it.?

54 posted on 06/21/2011 12:56:38 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple ( getting closer to the truth.................)
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To: PeterPrinciple

Well, I would contend that maintenance is a form of wealth generation or at least protection. If you don’t do the maintenance, the system stops functioning pretty soon and then you have a serious loss of wealth.

I find it quite interesting that lots of posters here are quite willing to post all about how government never creates wealth, but are shy about posting their definition of what is and is not wealth creation.

If they can’t define what they’re talking about, how can they be so positive the government isn’t doing it?


55 posted on 06/21/2011 1:07:25 PM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Qbert
But if it's not financed with higher taxes, and if it doesn't drive up interest rates, it's hard to see how it can destroy jobs.

Uh...how is this spending paid for if not through higher taxes or borrowing (which raises interest rates)?

56 posted on 06/21/2011 1:15:47 PM PDT by Straight Vermonter (Posting from deep behind the Maple Curtain)
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To: MNJohnnie

I agree a lot went to states to keep public employees on the payroll for another year or two just delaying the pain.

Addtionally, a lot went to studies, grants and academic research programs to line the pockets of leftist academics and reasearch teams. No new jobs were created as it takes six years to make a PHD — instead grants funded higher incomes for these chosed few of the right (I mean left) qualifications.


57 posted on 06/21/2011 1:44:19 PM PDT by KC Burke
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To: Qbert
(Alan Blinder from Wiki) He was an adviser to Al Gore and John Kerry during their respective presidential campaigns in 2000 and 2004.

All I need to know.

58 posted on 06/21/2011 1:52:14 PM PDT by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: Qbert

Former Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Alan Blinder? Which One?

#1
Transcript of Pelosi, House Democratic Leaders, and Economists’ Press Conference Following Economic Forum 10/21/2009

http://www.speaker.gov/newsroom/pressreleases?id=1414

“So for that reason, despite the fact that we’re looking at an absolutely horrendous long-term fiscal outlook,”

or

#2
Wall St. Journal : The Case for Optimism on the Economy 12/16/2009 | Alan Blinder

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2408814/posts?page=24

“Let me offer instead, in deliberately one-sided fashion, the case for optimism.”


59 posted on 06/21/2011 1:59:05 PM PDT by Son House (The Economic Boom Heard Around The World => TEA Party 2012)
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To: Sherman Logan
Well, I would contend that maintenance is a form of wealth generation or at least protection. If you don’t do the maintenance, the system stops functioning pretty soon and then you have a serious loss of wealth.

We are on the same page. My problem with the govt is that they think spending all this money now on the interstate system will generation jobs and wealth like it did the first time.

What is wealth? Again I will go with Adam Smith in that when you get done, it generates more wealth. It is not the item it self but how it is used. Computers can generate more wealth but can also generate more bureaucracy.

It is also related to maturity of a family or govt. When you have easy wealth available, you will spend it foolishly, it is the nature of things. One generation earns it, the next spends it.

I have studied farm records for 30 years. The one bottom line I have is cash flow affects mgt more that mgt affects cash flow. If cashflow is tight I make better decisions, IF I win the lottery tomorrow, I make poor decisions. Which leads to the next discussion, what is the difference between wealth and cashflow?

60 posted on 06/21/2011 2:04:18 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple ( getting closer to the truth.................)
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