I think this is a common Austrian approach to economics. "Government can't ever offer a solution" is their internal starting point for every issue, and then they attempt to build a narrative around that. I think the order of operations is backwards with that.AdamA wrote:But there has to be a downside to this. There are no free lunches.MediumTex wrote:
A great idea right now would be for the government to send every household a check for $5,000. If this didn't jumpstart the economy, send another $5,000 check in six months, and continue this process until these direct injections of money into consumers' pockets started to show up in strengthening aggregate demand.
What are the negative effects of a policy like this, and at would point would they become worse than the problem we already have?
There are many things that government cannot help with, but insufficient aggregate demand is not one of them. If the market was absolutely perfect, we wouldn't have unemployment in the first place. What sense does it make to idle resources sitting around? In a depression, people won't farm while people starve. They won't build when people are homeless. It is madness. Everyone is gripped with the desire to hoard currency rather than spend/produce.
Spending is the heart of the capitalist economy, and if spending stops, the system breaks down entirely. The real problem is that many actors spend today based on their projections of other actors future spending. There is a feedback loop. This is obviously witnessed as our economy often slams between prosperity and recession, boom and bust. Our economy needs a source of autonomous spending to bring us back into a positive feedback loop. It would be in the private sectors best interest to all resume spending at once, bringing us back into a positive feedback loop, but we all intuitively know that we cannot expect that level of cohesion from a collection of individuals.
The government is by far the easiest way. They are not constrained by revenue, and can spend and spend indefinitely. Their ultimate purpose is to support the private sector by preventing "race to the bottom" behavior. The hoarding of money is definitely a "race to the bottom" that needs to be stopped.