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Macro Economics




                    Notes


                                     Caselet     The Case of Borrowing Born Out of the
                                                 Great Depression

                                     A      t the  core of  Keynesian economics is the  idea that  fiscal policy  (government
                                            taxing and spending) should be used as a tool to control an economy.

                                     It was a theory espoused by one of the 20th century's greatest thinkers, British economist
                                     John Maynard Keynes, whose ideas helped shape the modern world economy and are still
                                     widely respected and followed today.
                                     Keynes's magnum opus – The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936) – was
                                     a direct response to the Great Depression. He argued that governments had a duty, one
                                     that had hitherto been neglected, to help keep the economy afloat in  times of trauma.
                                     It was a rebuke to an idea from Frenchman Jean-Baptiste Say (1767-1832) that in the economy
                                     as a whole "supply creates its own demand", meaning that merely producing goods would
                                     create demand.

                                     The assumption until the Great Depression had been that the economy was in large part
                                     self-regulated - that the invisible hand, left to itself, would automatically raise employment
                                     and economic output to optimal levels. Keynes strongly disagreed.

                                     During a downturn, he said, the drop in demand for goods could cause a serious slump,
                                     causing the economy to contract and pushing up unemployment. It was the responsibility
                                     of government  to kick-start the economy by borrowing  cash and  spending it,  hiring
                                     public-sector  staff and  pouring cash  into public infrastructure projects  - for example,
                                     building roads and railways, hospitals and schools. Interest-rate cuts can go some way
                                     towards lifting an economy, but they are not the whole answer.
                                     According to Keynes, the extra cash spent by the state would filter through the economy.
                                     For example, building  a new  motorway creates  work  for  construction firms,  whose
                                     employees go out and spend their money on food, goods and services, which in turn helps
                                     keep the wider economy ticking over. Key to his argument was the idea of the multiplier.

                                     Say the US government orders a $10bn (£6bn) aircraft carrier. You might assume the effect
                                     of this  would be merely to  pump $10bn  into the  US  economy.  Under the  multiplier
                                     argument, the actual effect would be bigger. The shipbuilder takes on more employees
                                     and generates more profits; its workers spend more on consumer goods. Depending on
                                     the average consumer's "propensity to consume", this could raise total economic output
                                     by far more than the amount of public money actually injected.
                                     If the $10bn increase caused total  United States  economic output  to rise  by $5bn, the
                                     multiplier would be 0.5; if it rose by $15bn, the multiplier would be 1.5.
                                     Keynesianism has always been controversial. On what basis, ask many of its critics, should
                                     we assume that governments know best how to run an economy? Is economic volatility
                                     really such a dangerous facet?
                                     Despite this, Keynes's arguments appeared to provide a solution to the Great Depression
                                     in the 1930s, and Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal - unveiled in response to the crisis - is
                                     seen as a classic example of a government "priming the pump" of its economy by spending
                                     billions amid a recession. Arguments still rage over whether it was this or the Second
                                     World War that eventually brought the Depression to an end, but the powerful message
                                     was that state spending worked.
                                                                                                         Contd...




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