Showing posts with label paradox of thrift. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paradox of thrift. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Richard Koo — “Paradox of thrift was the norm before industrial revolution”


Rather than "paradox of thrift," I would say that it was the absence of credit owing to lack of investment opportunity with an expectation of repayment. More liberal credit extension made higher growth possible but brought financial cycles with it. 

Koo recognizes this but chooses to call it the result of the paradox of thrift. That seems odd to me.

Real-World Economics Review Blog
“Paradox of thrift was the norm before industrial revolution” 
Richard Koo

Monday, October 19, 2015

Warren Mosler — The Paradox of Thrift in the Book of Proverbs.


Keeper.
Paradox of thrift goes way back.It’s always an unspent income story…;)
There is that scattereth, and yet increaseth; and there is that withholdeth more than is meet, but it tendeth to poverty.
The liberal soul shall be made fat: and he that watereth shall be watered also himself.—Proverbs 11:24–25
The Center of the Universe
Proverb, Expected Household Spending, my RT interview
Warren Mosler

Monday, October 7, 2013

Bernard Condon — Families 'Scarred' From Financial Crisis Still Afraid To Spend

Five years after U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers collapsed, triggering a global financial crisis and shattering confidence worldwide, families in major countries around the world are still hunkered down, too spooked and distrustful to take chances with their money.
An Associated Press analysis of households in the 10 biggest economies shows that families continue to spend cautiously and have pulled hundreds of billions of dollars out of stocks, cut borrowing for the first time in decades and poured money into savings and bonds that offer puny interest payments, often too low to keep up with inflation.
"It doesn't take very much to destroy confidence, but it takes an awful lot to build it back," says Ian Bright, senior economist at ING, a global bank based in Amsterdam. "The attitude toward risk is permanently reset."
A flight to safety on such a global scale is unprecedented since the end of World War II.
The implications are huge: Shunning debt and spending less can be good for one family's finances. When hundreds of millions do it together, it can starve the global economy.
The Huffington Post
Families 'Scarred' From Financial Crisis Still Afraid To Spend
Bernard Condon | AP

Everyone trying to devalue and export their way out while enforcing austerity domestically. Not working.





Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Andrea Terzi — Olli Rehn and ‘distinguished’ economists


Andrea Terzi schools European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Olli Rehn on saving and the paradox of thrift. Another case of a prominent economist either unaware of Keynes or ignoring him.

Mepoc
Olli Rehn and ‘distinguished’ economists
Andrea Terzi | Professor of Economics at Franklin College and he is the coordinator of the Mecpoc project that promotes and encourages education and research in new concepts and methods of economic policy analysis

Monday, May 21, 2012

Peter Dorman — Metaphorically Speaking


Peter Dorman elucidates the paradox of thrift with a metaphor.

Read it at Econospeak
Metaphorically Speaking
by Peter Dorman
(h/t Mark Thoma)

What he doesn't provide a metaphor for though is the difference between the currency issuer and currency users that makes the paradox even more stupid.