I'm not sure I follow this one. The plowman overtaking the reaper has a Marxist ring to it; but if that's what he's going for, why does he consider "the treader of grapes" more virtuous than the dude who sows seed?
EDIT: Ah, if seed is capital, then it makes sense.PS. What a commie! (And the last sentence makes this a decidedly pro-opulence, anti-subsistence statement.)
Last edited by Goo For You; 02-19-2013 at 03:15 PM.
The whole point of stimulus is to "boost" the numbers by allowing debtors not to go bankrupt, by creating expectations of future stability, and so forth. Calling it artificial (i.e. bad) is coherent only insofar as you have a story about how many more people should be bankrupt right now for things to get better (which is, of course, oxymoronic in the view of mainstream macroeconomics).
PS. Maybe this will help: The "bad investments" you're thinking of were liquidated largely in the subprime collapse in 2006-2007; then there was a whole year of really nothing spectacular happening -- no capital flight or anything like that (even after Bear Stearns went under) -- until the government unexpectedly let Lehman Brothers collapse, and the Fed unexpectedly let expectations collapse, which then started to take down "good" investments and economic activity (which the stimuli are now trying to restore).
Last edited by Goo For You; 02-19-2013 at 11:07 PM.
Yes. Transfer payments (to retirees, or anybody) don't add anything to GDP.
Weird how you feel a need to take a "X" into account with a GDP number. Thought you & Krugs were all about the nominal?![]()
So who cares about 'real' or 'adjusted' numbers?![]()
Speaking of Japan, „1,628.4 billion trade deficit. With Abe's easing, how can that be? The UK experienced a 0.01% growth in exports with a 20% easing of their currency. Why would that happen?
Devaluing helps exports, afterall....
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Last edited by Avery; 02-20-2013 at 12:55 AM.
Firstly, I think we should be looking at absolute export numbers (because more exports leads to more consumption and more imports, and because there's nothing inherently bad or unsustainable about a trade deficit).
Secondly, maybe it's too early to be talking about Abenomics' effect on exports. Here's how things worked out during the Koizumi years (which many people for some reason consider "stagnated"):
That seems like a huge increase thanks to Koizumi's QE:
I haven't paid much attention to UK. What do they even export? Maybe their exports are becoming wildly uncompetitive (and the easing prevented a giant fall)?The UK experienced a 0.01% growth in exports with a 20% easing of their currency. Why would that happen?
EDIT: If they export mainly to EU then Eurozone demand weakness is probably a big part of the explanation.![]()
Last edited by Goo For You; 02-20-2013 at 04:27 AM.
it's not subsistance at all; it is abundance. the entire world will be as fertile as the Garden of Eden. the harvesters aren't lazy; they're gathering as fast as they can, 'cause they can re-plant non-stop.
agrarian riches used to be, and will be again, real riches; the sheep on a thousand hills; the cattle on a thousand hills; etc.
The day you give your heart to Jesus, He will set you free.
Exactly, and therefore there is a tension between Jesus/God wanting a workers' revolution and opulence at the same time. If you can't have both, which one would you say is more important?
(Like I argued before, if you want to eradicate all the Shylocks of the world, you must in the process destroy futures and credit markets and force farmers to live uninsured and precarious lives.)
PS. If you're going to sidestep this argument, why not just admit that your view of Christianity necessitates belief in radical communism?
Last edited by Goo For You; 02-20-2013 at 03:35 PM.
The day you give your heart to Jesus, He will set you free.
So God is a tyrant who wants humans to implement communism?
Ha, MatthewT is not alone!Evangelical economic attitudes are anything but unanimous. Though it is fair to characterize the typical evangelical as supportive of capitalism and opposed to communism -- a view that they share with most other Americans -- there is wide variation of thought within the movement's religious and intellectual leadership. At one extreme, Christians Reconstructionists and the so-called New Christian Right enthusiastically embrace freemarkets and decry virtually all forms of government intervention. At the opposite extreme, self-styled "radical evangelicals" brand capitalism as hopelessly decadent and espouse a quasi-Marxist theology of liberation. The majority fall between these extremes, some calling for greater government intervention and larger social welfare programs and others advocating more free enterprise and a smaller government sector.
Live and learn...![]()
i'm never alone; one of the perks of being a disciple of Jesus Christ![]()
The day you give your heart to Jesus, He will set you free.
You forgot for a moment that I've criticized my "god" in this thread, didn't you?
Do you recognize that your interpretation of the Bible evolves over time? And if so, do you appreciate the moral implications of that?![]()
for the love of dawg, will this crapfest ever end???![]()
I hate being bipolar, its awesome.
is it wishful thinking, or are the libs finally starting to see obama for the loser that he is?
The day you give your heart to Jesus, He will set you free.
The day you give your heart to Jesus, He will set you free.
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