Commentaries (some of them cheeky or provocative) on economic topics by Ralph Musgrave. This site is dedicated to Abba Lerner. I disagree with several claims made by Lerner, and made by his intellectual descendants, that is advocates of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). But I regard MMT on balance as being a breath of fresh air for economics.
Saturday 3 November 2012
Demand is all that matters.
Some of us have been pointing out for a long time that the confidence fairy is hogwash and that interest rate adjustments are near irrelevant. I.e. all that matters is demand.
Demand ITSELF creates jobs, thus the question as to what proportion of any additional demand funds investment is not desperately important: it’s something that can be left to businesses and the free market to sort out.
However, there are those with a fetish about investment spending. It tends to be those with a “toys for boys” mentality: multi-million pound, high tech investment projects turn them on. So for the benefit of the “toys for boys” brigade, the chart below (from a recent Bank of England paper) will be of interest. It shows that demand (the blue line) is much the most important determinant of investment spending, rather than "inability to raise external finance", "cost of finance", etc.
Amazing that, isn’t it? Businesses invest when they see customers coming thru the door. That point will be obvious to the average convenience store proprietor, but it seems to be beyond the comprehension of many a self-appointed sophisticate: politicians, economists and so on.
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Not specifically related to this post, but there was no email to contact you at. Have you looked into bitcoins? http://howtobitcoin.info/
ReplyDeleteHi kg4e7,
ReplyDeleteThanks for that link. It looks a bit technical.
For the benefit of any readers puzzled as to why we are on about bitcoins, this is do do with an article of mine here:
http://www.positivemoney.org.uk/2012/10/do-bitcoin-paypal-etc-threaten-positive-moneys-ideas/
I was concerned as to whether unofficial forms of money (e.g. Bitcoin, local currencies, Airmiles, etc) posed a threat to official national currencies. I don't think they do, first because national currencies are legal tender. Second, taxes must be paid in official currencies.