The Morrison government is increasingly frustrated with Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe’s calls for it to spend more to lift the nation’s flagging productivity, after a confidential cabinet briefing from the RBA boss on Monday left ministers exasperated by an absence of detailed policy ideas.
Dr Lowe in a speech on Wednesday again exhorted the Coalition to do more to foster business spending as he highlighted a “troubling decline in productivity growth”, despite “fantastic” economic fundamentals. “While the reasons for this are complex, it is hard to escape the conclusion that higher levels of investment spending would promote productivity growth and our collective living standards,” he said.
Look Phil, have you not been paying attention to the last lost decade of public sector spending and how it’s left the economy adrift, and not just ours?
Hop on one of those streetcars down George Street to see just how wildly wasteful public spending is. Come along to Melbourne and look at the new tunnel we’re building.
Why don’t we build some more windmills? Solar panels?
Maddening to see how shallow public sector economists are. They will be the ruin of us.
There is not a line in the speech that is not worthy of the applause it received. Watching Pelosi during the speech, however, is watching a woman under extreme distress. The speech is for the adults while the follow-up was for the children.
This is her explanation.
Why aren’t the Democrats deeply embarrassed? No loyal opposition when the socialists are not in power.
I wasn’t going to bother with the story because its title was so ridiculius – Britain’s Productivity Decline Is the Worst in 250 Years – as if you could measure productivity going back even sixty years. But what they show in the chart is true enough, and about which I have been writing quite a bit. The Keynesian “stimulus” has been a disaster everywhere it has been tried, with the example here the UK. To compound their idiocies, this is what they wrote:
Productivity was almost 20% below its pre-2008 path in 2018 — the worst slowdown since 1760-1800, as the Industrial Revolution took hold. The present-day malaise may have been caused by the end of the information and communications technology boom, the financial crisis, and Brexit.
And the authors are, of course, part of the mainstream and at its very heights:
It’s a “shockingly bad” performance, said Nicholas Crafts, who co-authored the paper with Terence Mills, researchers at the University of Sussex and Loughborough University. The findings will published by the National Institute Economic Review on Feb. 6.
Productivity is here measured as output per hour worked. If the government diverts production from the private sector to its own public agenda, you inevitably get a vastly diminished level of value-adding production, even though employment continues to increase because the real wage adjusts. Why people cannot see this is amazing to me, but here is yet more evidence of just how out of it economists now are. That the period in question is the period following the GFC ought to have been a clue, but Keynesians – i.e. modern macroeconomists – are notoriously clueless.
Let me again mention the cover description for my next book:
‘Classical Economic Theory and the Modern Economy’
Steven Kates
Economic theory reached its highest level of analytical power and depth in the middle of the nineteenth century among John Stuart Mill and his contemporaries. This book explains classical economics when it was at its height, followed by an analysis of what took place as a result of the ensuing Marginal and Keynesian Revolutions that have left economists less able to understand how economies operate.
Chapters explore the false mythology that has obscured the arguments of classical economists, clouding to the point of near invisibility the theories they had developed. Kates offers a thorough understanding of the operation of an economy within a classical framework, providing a new perspective for viewing modern economic theory from the outside. This provocative book not only explains the meaning of Say’s Law in an accessible way, but also the origins of the Keynesian revolution and Keynes’s pathway in writing The General Theory. It provides a new look at the classical theory of value at its height that was not based, as so many now wrongly believe, on the labour theory of value.
A crucial read for economic policy-makers seeking to understand the operation of a market economy, this book should also be of keen interest to economists generally as well as scholars in the history of economic thought.
My book is premised on the belief that a modern economist is incapable of understanding what’s wrong with modern economic policy. This paper proves it all once again.
He’s 93 so probably no longer compos mentis, but as it says here:
He melodramatically proclaims…that “what we do in the next few years will determine the next few thousand years.” If we don’t take action, he declares, “the collapse of our civilizations and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizon.”
The Walter Cronkite of climate change. Sounds plausible, inevitably wrong when it matters. And to round this out, let me add this:
And for just a bit of additional politics of the left to add to the mix, there was this:
The most political moment came towards the end for a nation wrestling with difficult questions over immigration and race. Children appeared in illuminated cages as Lopez and her daughter, Emme, sang Born in the USA. As she sang, Lopez was wearing an American flag that she reversed to show the colours of Puerto Rico.
____________________________ Below is the original post
Once a year I watch a professional football game from the US. Poisoned for me, as for many others, by the kneeling during the American national anthem by people who have more freedom and wealth than 99.9% of the world’s population and commenced by someone who had been the quarterback for San Francisco, one of the two teams playing today. It was a remarkable game, and as is typical with more variety than you will find in any other sporting event I know, since the possibilities for the unusual and unexpected exists in North American football (reminder: the game was invented in Canada) in ways that are truly unique. The game today was no different. And like cricket, unless you grow up with it, you might never catch on to its fascination.
Let me however look at the halftime show a bit more closely. Most of the time, I was doing my sudoku while it was on. Soft porn. This is from Drudge so you can see I am not alone in seeing things this way:
However, right in the middle there was suddenly found a cross, just as you might find it outside some Christian Church which made me sit right up and take notice. But then I realised what I was actually looking at.
The symbol of the Roman goddess Venus is commonly used to represent the female sex. It also stands for the planet Venus and is the alchemical symbol for copper.
The half-time show, amazingly enough, was about girl power. American politics on the left cannot get more absurd.
As for the game, you can watch the replay below. And in watching, it may help you to remember that the team in white is from Nancy Pelosi’s home district in California, not that anyone should mix politics with sport.
UPDATE: The tweet above comes from this: Massive Brexit Celebration Destroys Years-Long Media Gaslighting. Essentially, as you will find if you go to the link where there is one example after another, the media will lie to you with a straight face and with no conscience if reality does not conform to their wishes.