Sam Brazil wrote:
How about this for a meta-explanation, just for giggles?
It's automation kicking in...the more automation, the fewer employees are needed, and therefore money thrown into the economy to be used by businesses ends up enriching the investor/owner class instead of making its way down to employees like it might have done in the past, when 100 employees were required to do what only requires 25 today. As automation gets worse, you can keep pumping more and more money to business, but it will concentrate more and more into the owners of the machines.
This isn't exactly a conspiracy that requires imagination. I worked for a company that specializes in creating software to automate things that used to require many people to do manually, and know friends in completely unrelated fields who have lost jobs directly because software innovation required fewer employees to do the job. It's not just about robots completely replacing humans -- software innovation can gradually chip away at the amount of humans needed to do things, yet still require some humans.
Back in PP land, I suppose none of this matters, because those productivity gains would be captured in rising stock prices...which is what we're seeing. We're also seeing deflation because, while assets are flying high, that money isn't making it through the general economy, and so money is becoming more and more scarce to the average person.
I think most people would agree that as technology gets more and more advanced fewer and fewer people will be able to earn a paycheck.
That is why the debate is now moving toward a universal guaranteed income. Under that light you will be guaranteed a minimum sustenance income of let's say about $1000 / month, in lieu of any other payments or benefits. Social security retirees would be exempt, as well as very young babies. That will give everyone a foundation for the basics. Then if you want to work above and beyond that is up to you. If you fall on hard times, cannot find work especially due to the relentless displacement of an increasing amount of workers from jobs, you'd have a basic safety net.
Switzerland is voting this fall for a basic universal income of about $1200 / mo for all.
I believe as technology marches on endlessly and more and more people are jobless this will become a "forefront issue".
St louis FED defines money velocity as :
https://research.stlouisfed.org/.../M2V/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Jun 24, 2015 - The velocity of money is the frequency at which one unit of currency is used to purchase domestically- produced goods and services within a given time period. In other words, it is the number of times one dollar is spent to buy goods and services per unit of time.
It does not say anything about GDP over units of currency etc. It is not obvious to me whether the trillions the FED created in the crisis of 2008 is part of M2 or not. If it is, that would explain the low velocity as all most of these funds are sitting in reserve with the FED earning 0-0.25 %, if it isn't, then the money is not being used for purchasing goods but it is being hoarded.