Field experiments and
natural observations are two kinds of
tests that aid in understanding big complex systems. In the former, you verify your theories by messing with the system and see how it reacts. In the latter, you make inferences from observing the system as it behaves normally. An observer might watch a colony of beavers working on a dam
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So if we cut spending, and all those out-of-work public servants stop spending the money they don't have, and a bunch of bridges fall down and poor people have to choose between food and housing, and the economy slows down even more, the solution must be to cut more spending.
I'm trying to figure out where the bottom is here. Bonus Armies marching on Washington, or something.
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I'm kind of hoping that things go badly. Badly enough to change the discussion.
If we assume that we won't default on debt then cutting 1.4B from the budget means cutting 50% from the budget. That would be pretty incredible. And would totally fuck the economy. Not to mention out of work public servants cutting benefits would have a huge impact on consumer spending (since benefit recipients are likely to be spending everything every month). Cutting 50% from the military would probably mean stopping paying soldiers entirely, not buying more weapons and turning off the AC in Afghanistan.
I think you'd see armies marching on Washington.
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Maybe it will! But would that be so bad? Our debts are denominated in dollars. And, sure, imported stuff from China would get harder to buy (and that would screw them hard, and in the short term it would be bad for people like me whose products complement imported goods) but it would suddenly make American labor and goods pretty attractive.
But on the other hand, there's hardly any consideration there of what a deflationary spiral would be like. Nobody remembers a deflationary spiral. That didn't happen under Jimmy Carter.
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Of course then the US would cease being the world's reserve currency and we'd have to pay the same kinds of interest rates that the rest of the world pays.
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http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/MG27Dj02.html
Steve Keen: The Roving Cavaliers of Credit
And for continuing education about economics, read Naked Capitalism.
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