brainstorm said:
I've heard this many times and it seems like the catch-22 of deflation. It's almost like saying as long as people have debts to pay, it is better to keep GDP growth high and prevent deflation - yet in order to pay off their debt, people have to spend and invest which keeps them borrowing more money with the hope of winning big by doing so and paying off their debts. Meanwhile, others are doing the same - which drives the consumption/investment-spending driven economy, so when lots of people start paying off their debts, the result is recession which necessitates fiscal stimulus in the form of more borrowing and spending. So how is it ever possible, in this cycle, to ever create a prosperous economy that doesn't keep people mired people in debt?
I have a quote for you:
"The misguided response of our policy makers has been to defend bondholders at all costs, using public funds to make sure that lenders get 100 cents on the dollar, plus interest, while at the same time desperately trying to prod consumers back to their former patterns of overconsumption. These policies are designed to preserve exactly the reckless and unsustainable behavior that caused the recent downturn. They are likely to fail because the strategy is absurd. The ultimate outcome, which will be forced upon us eventually if we do not pursue it deliberately, will be the eventual restructuring of debt obligations and a gradual shift in the profile of U.S. economic activity toward greater saving – either to finance exploding government deficits, or preferably, to finance an expansion in productive investment, research and development, and capital accumulation.
From my perspective, bolder approaches are required. Debt that cannot be serviced should be restructured, rather than socializing the losses of reckless private decision-making. We will inevitably have a large "stimulus" package, but it will be essential to craft it in a way that emphasizes incentives to create and accumulate productive capital, both private and public."
http://www.creditwritedowns.com/2010/07/john-hussman-on-taxes-and-tobins-q-ratio.html#ixzz0uA5bi3uS
There are several things in our system which help to encourage market cycles.
1) Bank Reserve requirements encourage and finical institution leverage rules allow an expansion and contraction of the money supply. Demand is the spending of consumers which is dependent on the money they have available.
2) Low Interest Rates encourage borrowing and over investment which means a growth in debt. The debt will grow until it becomes unserviceable.
3) Asset inflation encourages people to not hold onto cash
4) Over Investment triggers a surplus of production which inevitable leads to deflation.
Something you may want to look at is
"According to the Austrian School business cycle theory, the business cycle unfolds in the following way. Low interest rates tend to stimulate borrowing from the banking system. This expansion of credit causes an expansion of the supply of money, through the money creation process in a fractional reserve banking system. This in turn leads to an unsustainable "credit-fuelled boom" during which the "artificially stimulated" borrowing seeks out diminishing investment opportunities. This boom results in widespread malinvestments, causing capital resources to be misallocated into areas which would not attract investment if the money supply remained stable.
Economist Steve H. Hanke identifies the financial crisis of 2007–2010 as the direct outcome of the Federal Reserve Bank's interest rate policies as is predicted by Austrian school economic theory.[94] Some analysts such as Jerry Tempelman have also argued that the predictive and explanatory power of ABCT in relation to the recent Global Financial Crisis has reaffirmed its status and, perhaps, cast into question the utility of mainstream theories and critiques.[95]
Austrian School economists argue that a correction or "credit crunch" – commonly called a "recession" or "bust" – occurs when credit creation cannot be sustained. They claim that the money supply suddenly and sharply contracts when markets finally "clear", causing resources to be reallocated back toward more efficient uses."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_School#Business_cycles
The solution in conventional monetary theory to stimulate demand is to lower the interest rate but not only does this help to maintain debt levels it subsidizes the industries which have over invested by allowing them to sell their inventory in the future where they can obtain a higher price (See my post: https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=415842). Consequently, rather then the population reaping the benefit of over production, monetary policy helps to reduce the supply available to consumers.
I have suggested in
another tread that the supply of money should match production and this is difficult to do in a fait money system because of the inherent instability of the money supply:
At times of a positive balance of payments, there are no excess reserves retained in a bank even when the bank refuses to increase loans, because the bank either lends the excess to other banks that are running a deficit on their balance of payments or purchase government debt for profit. It is precisely the credit-creation process dictated by profit seeking motives that is the source of instability.
This is then, Minsky’s "financial instability hypothesis". The endogenous nature of money is linked to the ultimate consequence for the nature debt rendered economic problems of a capitalist economy are accompanied by the exchanges of present money and future money. The "financial instability hypothesis" starts with the high level of investment due to the high return of profits, as profits provides cash flows to service debt which in turns yields more profits and leads to a boom in the equity market. The rapid pace of output growth forces firms to take on more debt to expand production fueled by optimistic expectations and competitive pressures. Given that risks are underestimated during the boom, the increasing demand leads to a surge in interest rates, which turns the financial structure of an economy into a ponzi-scheme-like structure. As opposed to the supply-led nature of interest rates that characterized as an exogenous variable. Firms and speculator became more indebted and less liquid. Given that credit created for the present consumption or production do not derived from capital, and as debtors are forced to refinance their debt at a higher level of interest rate. That gives rise to a situation where cash outflows are greater than inflows, heightening the debt burden of the borrowers and entity of securitized structure. Financial euphoria slowly changes to financial panic; lenders start to lose their confidence in the future and that pushes asset prices down. As the quantity of credit provided by banks lessens, borrowers can no longer refinance, so that gross profit eventually collapses and investment falls or even stops.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endogenous_money#Comparing_to_exogenous_theories_of_money