Stimulus believers put economic machine ahead of people
Published in The Tennessean , Sunday, June 27, 2010 Stimulus believers put economic machine ahead of people by Richard J Grant An unfortunate effect from the teaching of mainstream (Keynesian) macroeconomics over the past 50 years has been to give the impression that the economy is some kind of machine that requires a government in the driver’s seat. This view has led to trouble precisely because the economy is not a machine. Our conventional measure of economic activity is what we call the Gross Domestic Product, or GDP. It gives us a rough idea of the dollar value of transactions that have taken place. When GDP falls for about half a year, we call it a “recession.” In the early stages of our most recent recession it was very common to hear people repeat the observation that “consumption makes up 70 percent of our economy.” This superficial observation would be harmless, but it led many to believe that we could make our economy “grow” again by encouraging people to consume more. That ...