Monsterzuma
the sly one
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2008
- Messages
- 2,984
Here's an attempt to criticize keynesian logic, both on the monetarist and neo-keynesian side:
In a situation where a demand gap threatens to continually widen under influence of the fact that too much saving is taking place and too little consumption, such that investments begin to fail due to a lack of sales in the short term situation, what do investors do?
Why do investors KEEP their money potted up in savings vehicles that, due to the impending economic collapse are now poised to break down and lose them their money?
Once it is clear that the "tipping point" is reached, savers/investors begin to panic and frantically start looking for other uses of their money. Where do they have left to run with it? They can of course put their money into commodities, but they realize that this will just create a bubble with respect to "normal" conditions, such that once the bubble deflates they will have paid a premium on these resources and made a losing deal, so this is far from ideal to them.
The same applies for investment in foreign economies: these were already priced at a fair equilibrium level with respect to normal conditions and to suddenly flood them with new investment capital is to overpay for them.
I argue that, given prices that are freely allowed to fall, consumption will be the thing that investors will fly into. If you have no means left of preserving your capital, you're much better off just making use of it while you can. And the consumption is now actually priced favorably due to the falling prices. In other words, the deflation is not positive feedback loop but a negative one.
In a situation where a demand gap threatens to continually widen under influence of the fact that too much saving is taking place and too little consumption, such that investments begin to fail due to a lack of sales in the short term situation, what do investors do?
Why do investors KEEP their money potted up in savings vehicles that, due to the impending economic collapse are now poised to break down and lose them their money?
Once it is clear that the "tipping point" is reached, savers/investors begin to panic and frantically start looking for other uses of their money. Where do they have left to run with it? They can of course put their money into commodities, but they realize that this will just create a bubble with respect to "normal" conditions, such that once the bubble deflates they will have paid a premium on these resources and made a losing deal, so this is far from ideal to them.
The same applies for investment in foreign economies: these were already priced at a fair equilibrium level with respect to normal conditions and to suddenly flood them with new investment capital is to overpay for them.
I argue that, given prices that are freely allowed to fall, consumption will be the thing that investors will fly into. If you have no means left of preserving your capital, you're much better off just making use of it while you can. And the consumption is now actually priced favorably due to the falling prices. In other words, the deflation is not positive feedback loop but a negative one.