dimelab dimelab: shrinking the gap between talk and action.

market failure Topic in The Credit Debacle Catalog

Market Failure II (1).

New Deal 2.0 Sun 2010-07-25 16:08 EDT

Marriner S. Eccles: Keynesian Evangelist Before Keynes

...From direct experience, [1930s Federal Reserve chairman Marriner S. Eccles] realized that bankers like himself, by doing what seemed sound on an individual basis, by calling in loans and refusing new lending in hard times, only contributed to the financial crisis. He saw from direct experience the evidence of market failure. He concluded that to get out of the depression, government intervention, something he had been taught was evil, was necessary to place purchasing power in the hands of the public. In the industrial age, the mal-distribution of income (which was hugely unequal) and the excessive savings for capital investment always lead to the masses exhausting their purchasing power, unable to sustain the benefits of mass production that such savings brought...By denying the masses necessary purchasing power, capital denies itself of the very demand that would justify its investment in new production. Credit can extend purchasing power but only until the credit runs out, which would soon occur without the support of adequate income...Eccles, who never attended university or studied economics formally, articulated his pragmatic conclusions in speeches a good three years before Keynes wrote his epoch-making The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936)....Eccles' transformation from a businessman, brought up to believe in survival of the fittest, to his belief in government spending on the neediest can teach us many lessons today...The solution is to start the money flowing again by directing it not toward those who already have a surplus, but to those who have not enough. Giving more money to those who already have too much would take more money out of circulation into idle savings and prolong the depression...Eccles promoted a limited war on poverty and unemployment, not on moral but on utilitarian grounds.

0; Keynes; Keynesian Evangelist; Marriner S. Eccles; new dealing 2.

Thu 2009-01-15 00:00 EST

Just when you thought things couldn't get any worse | The Smirking Chimp

Just when you thought things couldn't get any worse, by Mike Whitney | The Smirking Chimp; deflation, market failure, and government bungling

just; Smirking Chimp; thought things; worse.

Sun 2007-08-26 00:00 EDT

naked capitalism: Market Failure I: "Money-Driven Medicine"

by Maggie Mahar

market failure; Money Driven Medicine; naked capitalism.

Sun 2007-08-26 00:00 EDT

naked capitalism: Market Failure II: Corporate Bankruptcy

Corporate Bankruptcies; Market Failure II; naked capitalism.