| Can you give me an example where this deflation worked as you described, where there was too much wealth and gold didn't provide enough money? I think it would be interesting to examine the policies that lead up to investments being worthless. And also an example where Keynesian has been followed and 0% inflation was achieved by just going with a big enough stimulus. From what I can see, out in the real world, the biggest practitioners of this theory are wracked with big growing systemic risks. At least those with large economic resources that allows them to gamble. China is doing this right now and when it pops, the Keynesians will be telling us how no one could have it seen it coming. The poor countries that believe in wealth through currency manipulation end up defaulting on the loans required to play these games. Meanwhile, there are plenty of examples where government focussed on a stable legal system and property rights. Switzerland, Singapore, Hong Kong. And plenty that used to have these conditions but got wealthy enough for its politicians to being playing the artificial growth games, like Japan and the US, who are actively pissing away all of their advantages. And your examples? |
http://www.federalreserve.gov/BOARDDOCS/SPEECHES/2002/200211...
China took a Keynesian approach in 2008 and rode out the international economic crisis fairly well. There is a massive real estate bubble in major cities, but this dates back to the late 1990s and is being fueled by China's lack of property taxes (making real estate free to own) and the lack of alternate investment opportunities (Chinese citizens cannot invest abroad). So China is seeing local bubbles and general inflation. The fact that local governments are financed by land sales creates a further incentive to jack up land prices and puts the central government in a bind. If you're interested in this stuff, you might find this podcast worth listening to:
http://popupchinese.com/lessons/sinica/attack-of-the-china-b...
It's a good question what will happen to the Chinese economy when the bubble bursts. But whatever precedes that doesn't have anything to do with Keynes or liquidity traps or deflation. And if you still have trouble with this think back to the basics and explain where Keynes' analogy is wrong. Why -- in the situation he describes of general deflation (a decrease in the money supply) -- would you ever want to increase the money supply by forcing people to dig rocks out of the ground? Why not just print more money and build an airport?