SirNitram wrote:Talk about fearmongering...
So ensuring the money flows up through the various levels, paying wages and increasing profits for a multitude of companies, is all inferior to giving it to the richest 10%, the primary group responsible for money disappearing into savings and not being invested in some form or another?
Money doesn't disappear into savings, you drop your money into savings, the banks then loan the money out or invest it themselves. If you are a velocity theorist then you could bitch and moan about how the velocity is slowed by such a move; however money can only be removed from the system by burying it.
Bankers don't make money buy sitting on it, particulary since virtually all western nations run positive inflation at all times, they have to send it back into the economy or they can't turn a profit.
Increasing production capacity does not necessarily increase local economic activity, since people have to BUY the increased volume of merchandise in order to make that happen.
The stock answer is not that the goal is to increase volume, but to decrease per unit costs. For instance if the extra investment coming from the rich, banks, or the tax breaks themselves can pay the high up front costs for modernizing a plant. What was previously a marginally economical investment becomes good business as the per unit cost nose dives.
Again the problem here is that assumption that marginally economic expansion is always possible doesn't necessarily hold true. Even if it does there is nothing that says it must be within your borders. Division by 10 again.
Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes.