Acala
Member
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2008
- Messages
- 13,421
RPF has been an amazing learning experience for me over the years. Sometimes by direct passing of information and sometimes by raising questions that send me away to learn on my own.
Recently, a poster mentioned Say's Law. I had heard of Say's law, but never really understood it. And the classical statements of the law are rather obscure. Anyway, I went off to try and understand it and now I think I get it. And it's very cool. Because it is so important to understanding some fundamental problems with Keynesianism and the whole notion of stimulating the economy with cash, I thought I would report back on the way I came to understand it.
Because we are used to thinking about supply and demand as opposing sides of a given transaction, we (by which I mean mainstream economists, politicians, media, and the public) have come to think of them as different entitites in the economy. As a result, we have come to the erroneous conclusion that these two entitites can be out of balance and that one side or the other can be stimulated like putting your finger on one pan of a scale.
To see through this illusion, let's look at the atomic level of the economic organism. Imagine Fred the Fisherman and Windsor the Chairmaker living in a barter economy. Fred goes out in his boat and catches enough fish to feed his family and then goes on to catch surplus fish to bring to the market. He has thus produced a supply of fish for the market. Likewise, Windsor makes more chairs than his family can use and brings the surplus to market. Windsor has thereby produced a supply of chairs for the economy at large. But when Fred comes to market with his basket of fish, he intends to give those fish to Windsor in exchange for a chair. Seen from the other side, Windsor brings his chair to market with the intent of exchanging it for Fred's basket of fish. So, while Fred's fish and Windsor's chair constitute a supply of goods, they simultaneously create DEMAND for goods! Fred's production of fish creates demand for Windsor's chair and Windsor's production of a chair creates a demand for Fred's fish. So supply and demand are one and the same thing! Production constitutes demand.
Using money as a fungible medium of exchange allows more complicated and remote transactions, but does not alter the fact that production and demand are the same thing.
So why does this matter? It matters because it demonstrates clearly why trying to stimulate demand by creating money must ultimately fail. The fact that government and banks can create money and buy goods with that money only means that they have figured out a way to steal or borrow production from somewhere else and have thereby impoverished someone in exchange for their gain. It also puts the lie to the Keynesian idea of aggregate supply and demand imbalance, since in the aggregate, supply and demand are the same thing!
Real economic growth comes from production of goods and services, which is both supply and demand. It cannot come from an influx of phony cash.
Recently, a poster mentioned Say's Law. I had heard of Say's law, but never really understood it. And the classical statements of the law are rather obscure. Anyway, I went off to try and understand it and now I think I get it. And it's very cool. Because it is so important to understanding some fundamental problems with Keynesianism and the whole notion of stimulating the economy with cash, I thought I would report back on the way I came to understand it.
Because we are used to thinking about supply and demand as opposing sides of a given transaction, we (by which I mean mainstream economists, politicians, media, and the public) have come to think of them as different entitites in the economy. As a result, we have come to the erroneous conclusion that these two entitites can be out of balance and that one side or the other can be stimulated like putting your finger on one pan of a scale.
To see through this illusion, let's look at the atomic level of the economic organism. Imagine Fred the Fisherman and Windsor the Chairmaker living in a barter economy. Fred goes out in his boat and catches enough fish to feed his family and then goes on to catch surplus fish to bring to the market. He has thus produced a supply of fish for the market. Likewise, Windsor makes more chairs than his family can use and brings the surplus to market. Windsor has thereby produced a supply of chairs for the economy at large. But when Fred comes to market with his basket of fish, he intends to give those fish to Windsor in exchange for a chair. Seen from the other side, Windsor brings his chair to market with the intent of exchanging it for Fred's basket of fish. So, while Fred's fish and Windsor's chair constitute a supply of goods, they simultaneously create DEMAND for goods! Fred's production of fish creates demand for Windsor's chair and Windsor's production of a chair creates a demand for Fred's fish. So supply and demand are one and the same thing! Production constitutes demand.
Using money as a fungible medium of exchange allows more complicated and remote transactions, but does not alter the fact that production and demand are the same thing.
So why does this matter? It matters because it demonstrates clearly why trying to stimulate demand by creating money must ultimately fail. The fact that government and banks can create money and buy goods with that money only means that they have figured out a way to steal or borrow production from somewhere else and have thereby impoverished someone in exchange for their gain. It also puts the lie to the Keynesian idea of aggregate supply and demand imbalance, since in the aggregate, supply and demand are the same thing!
Real economic growth comes from production of goods and services, which is both supply and demand. It cannot come from an influx of phony cash.