None of these are necessarily inflationary. Inflation can come from an increase in demand or a decrease in supply on a wide range of basic goods, none of which are strictly related to monetary or fiscal policy, although circulating currency plays a role.
Our current economic policies of Free Trade and Monetarism (Free Trade in currency), which suppress domestic production, and open our markets to ungovernable international demand, as well as deregulation of private financial institutions money creating powers, is enough to cause hyper inflation, which is on the horizon.
Our current economic paradigm is unsustainable, what we've seen in the last 18 months is only the first shock of cacading collapse that will envelop us if the we do not return to fundamental national economic management of productive forces and our currency. And not one the major parties, particularly the Conservatives, even recognizes that we have a problem.
I guess you were not around to see the mess the dippers did to our province during their reign of terror. Campbell fixed most of it despite the militant government unions fighting every inch of the way. And don't forget it was the dippers that started us on the road to the olympics."And heard today by all spectrums of parties like the Cons and their union bashing.
All parties have the same long term objective, go into a socialist NAU or get mowed over even harder by the EU."
And you don't think the Liberals have the same agenda? Gordon Campbell, Premier of BC lied his way into the Premier's Office and continues to lie to the people of BC in the unrealistic belief that lying and covering up is acceptable. Unfortunately for hi and his fellow Liberal MLA's they have lied once to often to the people, We are all looking for a way to recall this liar and show him and his Liberal Party members where the out door is. The scary thing is the damage he will cause to the Province of BC during this reign of terror.
And now the Liberals can do more with less (apparently)with EI:Awhh schuck.....Already been done by "Waterhole" Troudeau in '75 with his wage and price control........"And it cost me money then":angryfire::angry3:
What he did first time around Taxslave, turned out well when we all thought it was awful at the time. I was one of the people who lost my job over it. That said, this time he has lied big time and the BC gov't should be recalled. What he got away with once for good reasons, he is now trying to get away with to cover up the massive over spending for the Olympics. I believe we need to turf him in the same way Ignatieff needs to be turfed.I guess you were not around to see the mess the dippers did to our province during their reign of terror. Campbell fixed most of it despite the militant government unions fighting every inch of the way. And don't forget it was the dippers that started us on the road to the olympics.
The easiest way to cause inflation is to monetize the debt. Or to take bank money too seriously. Buying something with a credit card is not at all the same as buying something with cash--two different types of currency.
That I agree with. My point though was: How do you keep taxes down, pay off the debt, and increase stimulous spending simultaneously? The money's got to come from somewhere. So if you're not raising taxes, the only way to get the money to pay off the debt and raise stimulous spending is by printing it pretty much, and that woudl lead to inflation. At times of deflation, printing money could be considered a wise move, but not when all indicators suggest that the current deflation is temporary and we're about to start growing again.
We have to be careful with definitions of domestic and international. For example, free trade allows a person from Vancouver to buy a car from Bellingham (Washington State, right across the border and very close to Vancouver) whereas before he may have had to buy the car from the province of Ontario. That would help to lower inflation owing to the gas saved from transportation, along with the money saved on trucks and drivers. Raise tariffs, and all of a sudden that Vancouverite has to buy from farther afield at the other end of Canada, and the extra gas, driver salaries, etc, woudl push the price up and cause inflation.
As for currency trading though, I fully agree. A world currency would put alot of currency traders who just make their money producing nothing but simply by tading currency, out of work, and good riddance.
So what concrete steps do you propose?
Actually this is the biggest fiction of Classic Liberal Economics.
Which this are you talking about? The next few paragraphs don't really clear that up for me. Are you agreeing with me? I cannot really tell.
I don't know if i can do much better. I'm not sure exactly what your case is.
Classic Liberalism refers to the economic ideology of Free Trade, Free Markets, laissez-faire policies that demonized government supervision of trade, currency, taxation and economic planning. It's fathers were Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Thomas Malthus amongst others.
Its first criticism came from Friedrich List, in his National System of Political Economy, who articulated policies put in place by Alexander Hamilton in America that is the antithesis of Liberalism. That became known as the National or American Economic Systems and were the model for MacDonald's National Polices. They have produced the strongest, most vital, and equitably distributed economic growth in history.
The Conservative monicer for Free Trade is a fraud, what Harper and the Free Market ideologues support is pure Economic Liberalism.
It is this i am saying that is failing, profoundly and driving us into an even deeper economic crisis.
Classical liberalism has its roots much farther back than Malthus et al. I think it goes back to Cicero (about 60 - 70 BC somewhere). Classical liberalism in North America goes back to Franklin, Jefferson, Madison, Hamilton, et al.
Ok. I should have said, "Classical liberalism in North America goes back to the days of Franklin, Jefferson, Madison, Hamilton, et al."That's only partially correct Anna. In the modern era, the founding treatise of Economic Liberalism was Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations, published in 1776. In the U.S. Jefferson and Hamilton were at opposite ends of the political spectrum. It was Jefferson, largely in support of agricultural (and slavery) interests, who promoted limited government, private banking, and free trade.
Hamilton in support of manufacturing, established the the Bank of the United States, the first central bank, and promoted tariff protection, public investment in infrastructure, notably transportation, and government planning in the economy, through regulation of credit and currency. It was Hamilton who prevailed and layed the groundwork for the explosive growth of the American economy, which provided the model for the Canadian economy under MacDonald.