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mjdgregThe answer is extremely simple for anyone who has spent any time looking into the fundamental economic theory.Depressed economic output, by definition, is economic output which is lower than that which would be produced if the economy were firing on all cylinders.Economies fail to fire on all cylinders because there is a lack of demand from private (business and individual) economic agents. In such a case, a Govt fiscal stimulus basically fills the gap of demand by injecting demand into the economy. If total aggregate demand remains weak, it is because Govt spending is not high enough. That is precisely the case that we have had since 2010. In 08-10, the Labour Govt supplemented aggregate demand by their fiscal stimulus. The result was a very strong rebound in growth. In 2010, this Govt cut the stimulus and growth collapsed. I really don't see how you can argue against that.Actually, I DO see. It's because you have no comprehension what a fiscal stimulus is. You think Govt borrowing equals fiscal stimulus. What is happening at the moment is that Govt borrowing is very high because tax receipts are in a long term slump. That is precisely the root of the deficit problem. Whilever private business is depressed and the economy is running below potential, tax receipts will be depressed. So, the only way that Govt borrowing can come down is by huge Govt spending cuts. But huge Govt spending cuts would remove still more demand from the economy (by putting more people on the file and removing more contracts from companies). So the economic slump will go on and tax receipts will go still lower. Round and round and round. A bit like arguing with you Mick.Now, one of the reasons why this Govt has been particularly economically illiterate is that the cuts they HAVE introduced in the first 2 years have been almost entirely in big infrastructure investments. One of the first things they did was to pull £4bn of school building jobs. Madness. Apart from creating long term problems in the quality of school infrastructure, this also led directly to a crippling collapse in the construction sector, putting more people on the dole and pulling yet more demand out of the economy.So, the simple answer to your ignorant question Mick, is that what we have at the moment is categorically NOT a fiscal stimulus. The Govt is spending on day-to-day stuff (pensions, NHS, dole money, running schools) but it doesn't have enough tax coming in to pay for it. (Which is why it has to borrow.) A fiscal stimulus would be DISCRETIONARY spending on long-term infrastructure projects over and above this day-to-day stuff, filling in for the things that the private sector is too scared to invest in. Or it would include massive inducements to companies to expand. Things like abolishing NI contributions on new recruitments. Or subsidies for companies to buy new plant and facilities. Govt subsidised encouragement for companies to expand. On a massive scale, with the intention of getting unemployment down by 1.5 million in 18 months. A fiscal stimulus would entail a much bigger increase in Govt spending. Another £50bn or so right now. Clear enough argument for you mjdgreg.
How on earth can doubling the already massive National Debt be described as 'austerity'?
This is your answerhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-20572144
More piss poor answers. Austerity is not as Billy would have you believe, 'Govt fiscal policy that is tighter than it ought to be given the state of Aggregate Demand in the economy'. You won't find that definition anywhere except in Billy's post. I defy Billy to post a link with his definition. No, the true definition is as follows:The United Kingdom government austerity programme is a series of sustained reductions in public spending, intended to reduce the budget deficit.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_government_austerity_programmeSo I repeat my question again in the vain hope of a sensible answer. How on earth can doubling the already massive National Debt be described as 'austerity'?
Quote from: mjdgreg on December 02, 2012, 08:47:34 pmMore piss poor answers. Austerity is not as Billy would have you believe, 'Govt fiscal policy that is tighter than it ought to be given the state of Aggregate Demand in the economy'. You won't find that definition anywhere except in Billy's post. I defy Billy to post a link with his definition. No, the true definition is as follows:The United Kingdom government austerity programme is a series of sustained reductions in public spending, intended to reduce the budget deficit.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_government_austerity_programmeSo I repeat my question again in the vain hope of a sensible answer. How on earth can doubling the already massive National Debt be described as 'austerity'?Now then Mick, did you not see the word 'intended' in the middle of that definition or do you not understend it's meaning? It has to be one deficiency or the other.Something can have the intention of doing something and fail. Failure doesn't change its nature. The government austerity programme can have whatever intentions it likes - just because it fails in those intentions doesn't stop it being an austerity programme. It just makes it a failure.
I give up mjdgreg. You are beyond parody. Your definition:"Goverment austerity programme is a series of sustained reductions in public spending"What I posted:"We have been tightening Govt spending since 2010. We have had Austerity since 2010."What are those two statements if not equivalent to each other, you infuriating idiot?
You are the single most ignorantly argumentative person I have ever had the misfortune to come across. You argue the most facile points of semantics when you are demonstrated to be wrong, whilst simultaneously making sweeping generalisations and posting easily checkable lies and non-facts.
What do you get out of this mjdgreg? What exactly is your purpose? Are you interested in finding out by rational discussion, or simply being an utter prick?
QuoteI give up mjdgreg. You are beyond parody. Your definition:"Goverment austerity programme is a series of sustained reductions in public spending"What I posted:"We have been tightening Govt spending since 2010. We have had Austerity since 2010."What are those two statements if not equivalent to each other, you infuriating idiot?At least you seem to agree with my definition of 'austerity'. We might be getting somewhere at last.You also posted:'The current Govt cut back on the stimulus that the previous Govt utilised. That is the very definition of Austerity'.You also posted:'Austerity = Govt fiscal policy that is tighter than it ought to be given the state of Aggregate Demand in the economy'.How many definitions are there? Which definition do you believe in? Where is the link (evidence) that shows one of your definitions is correct? Do you change your definition to back up the current load of waffle you are spouting?QuoteYou are the single most ignorantly argumentative person I have ever had the misfortune to come across. You argue the most facile points of semantics when you are demonstrated to be wrong, whilst simultaneously making sweeping generalisations and posting easily checkable lies and non-facts.I'd be grateful if you could point out my most recent 'lie'. I am nothing but honest and am sure you will struggle. Same goes for non-facts. Which is my most recent one? Show me where I am wrong. Again, I am confident you won't be able to.QuoteWhat do you get out of this mjdgreg? What exactly is your purpose? Are you interested in finding out by rational discussion, or simply being an utter prick?All I'm doing is putting the common-sense view across and exposing the spend, spend, spend, leftie ideology for the idiocy that it is.Now, back to my question. So far no-one has answered it properly and I've given up hope that anyone ever will. So I'll give you the answer.Due to the government spending more during this parliament than any previous government ever has, then we are not enduring 'austerity'. Public spending is continuing to rise in case you hadn't all noticed. For us to be enduring austerity it would have to be falling. How simple was that to work out? I gave you the clue in the question (the National Debt is going to double in 5 years). So why on earth anyone thinks we are enduring 'austerity' is totally beyond me. Another one of Billy's myths exposed.
What a complete and utter fool, you`ve told us in the same post that we are suffering austerity and we are n`t!
QuoteThis is your answerhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-20572144These people are suffering the consequences of believing Gordon Brown had abolished boom and bust. They are also trying to come to terms with an unsustainable housing bubble that still has some way to go to deflate.Does any sane person expect that Billy's solution that we should spend £50 billion on infrastructure really think that this will solve these people's problems? Does anyone seriously think that building some more schools is going to make all these people spend more money and get into even more debt? The simplicity of Billy's ideas beggars belief. Look, its very simple. People have overspent and now need to cut back and get their houses in order. Only then will they start to spend again. We've had the party, now its time to get on with the hang-over.
Examples of you posting lies? That 900% debt to GDP ratio is but the latest example. I challenged you to post the original source and once again you went into hull-down bullshit mode. Just like every time your bluff is called. Every. Single. Time. Of course, the reason you cannot post the original source is that it doesn't exist. There you go. A perfect example to prove me wrong if you can find it.
mjdgreg. You're doing it again. You see an intellectually coherent argument. You refuse to engage with the argument. You instead say "Nope. That can't work."No explanation why it doesn't work. No critique. Just a statement of faith.It's like arguing with a Catholic about whether Mary really gave birth while still a virgin. Or arguing with a Southern Baptist about evolution. You set out the facts and the theoretical argument. You explain patiently the logic. And the religious zealot says, "Nope. I don't believe it. I won't argue with you. I'll just state that what I believe is true, even though I can offer no rational argument why that should be."There's a theory in psychology that people most criticise what they most despise about themselves. I understand why you hate the religious so much mjdgreg. Because you're one of them yourself.
QuoteExamples of you posting lies? That 900% debt to GDP ratio is but the latest example. I challenged you to post the original source and once again you went into hull-down bullshit mode. Just like every time your bluff is called. Every. Single. Time. Of course, the reason you cannot post the original source is that it doesn't exist. There you go. A perfect example to prove me wrong if you can find it.That was easy. Here's what you said about the evidence I provided about the 900% 'lie'. Next 'lie' please.'And by the way, that Morgan Stanley data on that website that you linked to - the one that discusses the issues in such a careful and balanced way - is considered highly questionable by most economists. They make some very sweeping and unjustified assumptions'.
mjdgregGo back and check. I challenged you to find the original source. That challenge still stands.Good job you didn't live 200 years ago. I'd have slapped you round the face with a leather glove and challenged you to a duel and your response would have been, "No, I haven't got time. I will save you from embarrassing yourself. And anyway, you spell it 'dual'."
CLAIM 2 Labour created the biggest deficit in the developed world by overspending. Firstly, the much banded about 2010 deficit of over 11% is false. This is the PSNB (total borrowings) and not the actual budget deficit which was -7.7% - OBR Economic and Fiscal Outlook March 2012 page 19 table 1.2 Secondly, in 1997 Labour inherited a deficit of 3.9% of GDP (not a balanced budget ) and by 2008 it had fallen to 2.1% - a reduction of a near 50% - Impressive! Hence, it's implausible and ludicrous to claim there was overspending. The deficit was then exacerbated by the global banking crises after 2008. See HM Treasury. Note, the 1994 deficit of near 8% haaaaaah!Thirdly, the IMF have also concluded the same. They reveal the UK experienced an increase in the deficit as result of a large loss in output/GDP caused by the global banking crisis and not even as result of the bank bailouts, fiscal stimulus and bringing forward of capital spending. It's basic economics: when output falls the deficit increases. Finally, the large loss in output occurred because the UK like the US have the biggest financial centres and as this was a global banking crises we suffered the most. Hence, the UK had the 2nd highest deficit in the G7 (Not The World) after the US and not as a result of overspending prior to and after 2008- as the IMF concur. As you refused to answer my previous request to correct the allegations made here - and that you have now repeated with your comment about Gordon Brown above - can you now do so please?
QuoteCLAIM 2 Labour created the biggest deficit in the developed world by overspending. Firstly, the much banded about 2010 deficit of over 11% is false. This is the PSNB (total borrowings) and not the actual budget deficit which was -7.7% - OBR Economic and Fiscal Outlook March 2012 page 19 table 1.2 Secondly, in 1997 Labour inherited a deficit of 3.9% of GDP (not a balanced budget ) and by 2008 it had fallen to 2.1% - a reduction of a near 50% - Impressive! Hence, it's implausible and ludicrous to claim there was overspending. The deficit was then exacerbated by the global banking crises after 2008. See HM Treasury. Note, the 1994 deficit of near 8% haaaaaah!Thirdly, the IMF have also concluded the same. They reveal the UK experienced an increase in the deficit as result of a large loss in output/GDP caused by the global banking crisis and not even as result of the bank bailouts, fiscal stimulus and bringing forward of capital spending. It's basic economics: when output falls the deficit increases. Finally, the large loss in output occurred because the UK like the US have the biggest financial centres and as this was a global banking crises we suffered the most. Hence, the UK had the 2nd highest deficit in the G7 (Not The World) after the US and not as a result of overspending prior to and after 2008- as the IMF concur. As you refused to answer my previous request to correct the allegations made here - and that you have now repeated with your comment about Gordon Brown above - can you now do so please?I really can't believe you are posting this drivel again. The claims in it are so ludicrous that it doesn't warrant a reply. Have you looked at the grammar and punctuation? Do you think a serious journalist would write in such an appalling way? Have you checked out his track record? The guy is a nobody and is obviously as thick as two short planks. It's so obviously a wind up and I'm amazed you can't see it.
mjdgreg.I'm not saying that you lied about that 900% claim. I'm saying that you posted a lie. Which makes you a gullible fool rather than a devious one.Show us where the original source is and I will 100% retract my accusations.So far, you HAVEN'T posted the original source. You've posted a graph on a swivelled-eyed rightwingnutter.com site on which is was claimed that the original source was Haver Analytics/Morgan Stanley. But you haven't shown where the original Morgan Stanley/Haver Analytics graph came from.Me, at first, I accepted that this would be a real source. But then I went looking for it. And I couldn't find it.I assume that YOU can, because you posted the data in the first place, and you wouldn't have posted data like that without checking it's veracity would you? Would you Mick?Prove it to us. Show us where the original data or report is. My apology is waiting for you. I suspect it'll be waiting a while.