I have never seen it explained better than this:
http://delong.typepad.com/sdj/2010/05/a-missing-macroeconomic-playbook.html
----------------------------------------snip
Let me briefly set out what the macro playbook is, and how it has been
developed by economists and policymakers over the past 185 years.
Start with Say's or Walras's Law: the circular flow principle that
everybody's expenditure is someone else's income--ands everyone's
income is somebody else's expenditure. It has to be that way: for
every buyer there is a seller: and for every seller who is
disappointed because they sell for less than their cost plus normal
profit because of excess supply there must be another who is exuberant
from selling at more than cost plus normal profit.

How, then, can you have a depression--a "general glut," a situation in
which there is excess supply of not one or a few but all commodity
goods and services? How can you have a situation in which workers laid
off from shrinking industries where demand is less than was expected
and thus less than supply are not rapidly hired into industries where
demand is more than was expected and hence more than supply?

Moral philosopher, libertarian, colonial bureaucrat, feminist, public
intellectual, and economist John Stuart Mill put his finger on the
answer in a piece he published in 1844:

[T]hose who have... affirmed that there was an excess of all
commodities, never pretended that money was one of these
commodities.... [P]ersons in general, at that particular time, from a
general expectation of being called upon to meet sudden demands, liked
better to possess money than any other commodity. Money, consequently,
was in request, and all other commodities were in comparative
disrepute. In extreme cases, money is collected in masses, and
hoarded; in the milder cases, people merely defer parting with their
money, or coming under any new engagements to part with it. But the
result is, that all commodities fall in price, or become unsaleable...






-raghu.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to