Don't have the text on me, but Peter Temin talks about it in The Jacksonian Economy. He compared 1929-1933 period to 1839-1843. In the former example, prices fell, unemployment, and consumption fell. In the latter example, prices fell, investment fell, but real consumption increased.There are some strong examples in the late 1800s (1880s and 1890s), as well. We were on a pure gold standard, and the U.S. had some of the highest productivity in history during that period.[Edited on February 17, 2012 at 5:02 PM. Reason : ]
2/17/2012 4:51:26 PM
2/17/2012 5:43:55 PM
2/19/2012 9:24:11 AM
2/19/2012 10:57:15 AM
no, what you're missing is why [user]McDouche[user] feels the need to use two usernames on here to post his mindless drivel.
2/19/2012 1:46:08 PM
nah I think its two different people. McDanger might have had the name for awhile why he was suspenders, but it seems as if he gave it to some kid he knows where he works or whatever. Their styles are different. McDanger readily blows up into a fit of internet rage and leaves threads without replying when he is losing arguments or fails to make points. Foolish hangs around for awhile rarely actually turning into the bitchmade rant factory that McDumbger does.
2/19/2012 2:17:29 PM
What can I say? It's easy to be an idiot. You're living proof.When I lose my patience it's because nobody here is willing to meet me halfway and do their own homework. Destroyer thinks we were on a "pure gold standard" in the 19th century. He posts about like 2 things, 1 of which is finance.[Edited on February 19, 2012 at 5:24 PM. Reason : .]
2/19/2012 5:22:43 PM
I'm sorry, but calling everyone who disagrees with you a racist doesn't count as "meeting halfway" to me.
2/19/2012 5:23:35 PM
I call a spade a spade. Isn't that supposed to garner the respect of conservatives?
2/19/2012 5:25:39 PM
2/19/2012 5:27:30 PM
2/19/2012 5:31:44 PM
^^^no, they only respect you if you call a spade a nigger
2/19/2012 5:43:17 PM
2/20/2012 1:41:23 AM
Guess who's back? Back again.
2/20/2012 2:11:31 AM
2/20/2012 3:54:38 AM
2/20/2012 8:52:17 AM
2/20/2012 9:51:03 AM
2/20/2012 3:54:59 PM
2/20/2012 7:39:31 PM
2/20/2012 8:06:37 PM
Please explain your ideal form of a fixed capitalist system. I'm honestly interested.
2/20/2012 10:54:18 PM
I honestly think that in order to produce markets with desirable properties, one must regulate (especially if the actors in those markets are private). Certain assumptions (in many cases, information symmetries) are required in order to gain socially desirable consequences. (I suggest looking up the work of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Arrow and Debreu for more info on the assumptions required to gain various beneficial properties we habitually unconditionally associate with markets.)Regardless of what conservative economic theory proclaims, real world economies have increasingly been characterize by a flight from the market (think of all the "collectives" that have popped up: corporations, trade unions, lobbies, political organizations, etc., all designed with the purpose of controlling outcomes by circumventing the market). Think about many raw inputs markets, and how many of them are cartel-controlled. Given that private organizations will always organize and gain power where private property is a thing (or simply that they currently exist), there should be other collectives in place to hold them in check, be they politically controlled or otherwise. Political control is subject to all of the less-than-ideal bullshit that comes with real-world politics, but the public needs a way to organize and express/fight for its interests (even those who don't own anything). The alternative is a world where, say, false advertising is perfectly legal, and a corporation with a shitload of money can get away with practically anything (sound vaguely familiar?).
2/21/2012 12:57:44 AM
tl;dr version: Swedish welfare state shit that'd make you guys puke
2/21/2012 12:59:17 AM
Took the words right out of my mouth
2/21/2012 1:29:03 AM
2/21/2012 9:32:33 AM
2/21/2012 11:39:39 AM
2/21/2012 1:40:25 PM
2/21/2012 2:32:40 PM
2/21/2012 5:17:16 PM
Haven't completed the wikipedia research yet to form a response on this one?
2/23/2012 5:23:54 PM