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Lacy Hunt This Is One of The Most Important Charts in Economics
Lacy Hunt This Is One of The Most Important Charts in Economics
Economics
zerohedge.com/news/2019-05-19/lacy-hunt-one-most-important-charts-economics
Via WorldOutOfWhack.com,
Lacy said he has never shown the next chart before . Adding, there are certain things in
economics that “hold true.” This is one of the most important charts in economics:
The green line shows the national savings rate. It is currently at 3%. It is historically
6%. We are running half of normal. The shaded area shows the private sector, which is
running at 9%. That’s pretty good. The red line shows the government sector and it is
running at -6% and dragging down national savings. That is where the problem lies.
But it is not going to stay there – the government deficit is moving even lower into
negative territory.
The government deficit will continue to grow. Tax cuts and the bipartisan agreed-upon
increase in spending do not lead to deficit reduction.
In other words, the public sector is going to constrain the private sector and the
economy. (SB: Debt acts as a noose around the economy’s neck.)… and guess which
sector provides the basis for better growth, the private sector or the public sector?
In other words, the government sector’s budget deficits are too large for the level of
savings
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Given the political structure of our country, it is unlikely the situation will change. Lacy
added, “impossible.”
The Production Function – it is dependent upon technology and the three factors of
production: land, labor and capital.
The production function states that if you overuse one of the three factors of
production, output will initially rise and will then flatten out and then turn down.
In other words, there is a non-linear relationship between debt and economic activity.
The simple-minded solution that if a $3 trillion program doesn’t work you try a $6
trillion program… that doesn’t work when diminishing returns takes effect.
The good news. If you want to call it that, is the US is the best in town.
Meaning we are not as far along the diminishing returns path as the rest of the world.
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Irving Fisher (1934), in perhaps his most important piece said, “When economies are highly
indebted, economies slow.”
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