My comment: Excellent way to explain the "common goods" and why this
is not a "normal" crisis.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

http://robertreich.blogspot.com/2008/12/logic-of-keynes-in-todays-world.html

Not long ago I was talking to someone who once had been a deficit hawk
but the current recession had turned into a full-blooded Keynesian. He
wanted a stimulus package in the range of $500 to $700 billion.
"Consumers are dead in the water," he said, fervently, "so government
has to step in." I agreed. But I didn’t tell him his traditional
Keynesianism is based on two highly-questionable assumptions in
today’s world, and the underlying logic of Keyenes leads us toward
something bigger and more permanent than he has in mind.

The first assumption is that American consumers will eventually regain
the purchasing power needed to keep the economy going full tilt. That
seems doubtful. Median incomes dropped during the last recovery,
adjusted for inflation, and even at the start weren’t much higher than
they were in the 1970s. Middle-class families continued to spend at a
healthy clip over the last thirty years despite this because women
went into paid work, everyone started working longer hours, and then,
when these tactics gave out, went deeper and deeper into debt. This
indebtedness, in turn, depended on rising home values, which generated
hundreds of billions of dollars in home equity loans and refinanced
mortgages. But now that the housing bubble has burst, the spending has
ended. Families cannot work more hours than they did before, and won’t
be able to borrow as much, either.

The second assumption is that, even if Americans had the money to keep
spending as before, they could do so forever. Yet only the most myopic
adherent of free-market capitalism could believe this to be true. The
social and environmental costs would soon overwhelm us. Even if
climate change were not an imminent threat to the planet, the rest of
the world will not allow American consumers to continue to use up a
quarter of the planet’s natural resources and generate an even larger
share of its toxic wastes and pollutants.

This would be a problem if most of what we consumed during our big-
spending years were bare necessities. But much was just stuff. And
surely there are limits to how many furnishings and appliances can be
crammed into a home, how many hours can be filled manipulating digital
devices, and how much happiness can be wrung out of commercial
entertainment.

The current recession is a nightmare for people who have lost their
jobs, homes, and savings; and it’s part of a continuing nightmare for
the poor. That’s why we have to do all we can to get the economy back
on track. But most other Americans are now discovering they can exist
surprisingly well buying fewer of the things they never really needed
to begin with.

What we most lack, or are in danger of losing, are the things we use
in common – clean air, clean water, public parks, good schools, and
public transportation, as well as social safety nets to catch those of
us who fall. Common goods like these don’t necessarily use up scarce
resources; often, they conserve and protect them.

Yet they have been declining for many years. Some have been broken up
and sold as more expensive private goods, especially for the well-to
do – bottled water, private schools, security guards, and health
clubs, for example. Others, like clean air, have fallen prey to
deregulation. Others have been wacked by budget axes; the current
recession is forcing states and locales to axe even more. Still
others, such as universal health care and pre-schools, never fully
emerged to begin with.

Where does this logic lead? Given the implausibility of consumers
being able to return to the same level of personal spending as before,
along with the undesirability of our doing so even if we could, and
the growing scarcity of common goods, there would seem only one
sensible way to restore and maintain aggregate demand. That would be
through government expenditure on the commons. Rather than a temporary
stimulus, government would permanently fill the gap left by consumers
who cannot and should not be expected to resume their old spending
ways. This wouldn’t require permanent deficits as long as, once
economic growth returns, revenues from a progressive income tax refill
the coffers.

My friend the born-again Keynesian might not like where the logic of
Keynesianism leads in today’s world, but the rest of us might take
heart.
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