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Money Flow in a Dynamic Economy : The Money Flow Paradigm Explains Economic Inefficiency, Instability, Inequality, and the Role of Government by Lawrence Marsh (2023, Trade Paperback)

About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherEmeritus Publishing
ISBN-10098285210X
ISBN-139780982852101
eBay Product ID (ePID)27061242073

Product Key Features

Number of Pages257 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameMoney Flow in a Dynamic Economy : The Money Flow Paradigm Explains Economic Inefficiency, Instability, Inequality, and the Role of Government
SubjectGeneral, Economics / General
Publication Year2023
TypeTextbook
AuthorLawrence Marsh
Subject AreaPolitical Science, Business & Economics
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.8 in
Item Weight14.7 Oz
Item Length9 in
Item Width6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
SynopsisDistorted money flow has diverted so much money from Main Street to Wall Street that the middle class can no longer buy back the value of the goods and services that they are capable of producing at full employment. Consequently, middle class private debt has grown enormously. But even that is not enough to maintain full employment, so Republicans engage in deficit spending with unpaid for tax cuts and Democrats with unpaid for expenditures to avoid high levels of unemployment and large vote losses at election time. Instead of working directly with the real economy, the Federal Reserve operates exclusively through the New York financial markets. Over many decades, to stimulate the economy the Fed has diverted enormous amounts of money to Wall Street instead of directing that money to Main Street. While in recent decades our economy has been growing at about 3 percent on average each year, stock prices on average have been growing at 10 percent. This has suppressed productivity and economic growth by causing non-financial firms to invest their money on Wall Street that would have otherwise gone into producing more and better consumer goods more productively. The people on Main Street have lost out, while the 10 percent richest people who own 84 percent of the stocks on Wall Street have gained enormous wealth. By restricting its operations to the New York financial markets, the Federal Reserve has only a weak and indirect effect on the real economy on Main Street. The Federal Reserve's cost-of-borrowing tool suppresses supply and demand to stop inflation and is brutal and ineffective risking recession. For over 50 years from 1911 to 1966 Americans could go to any post office to set up a savings account. By reissuing the Postal Savings Act of 1910, Congress could provide the Federal Reserve with a new return-on-savings tool offering 10 percent on savings (maximum $10,000) at any post office. Getting people to save more and spend less can stop inflation without sending our economy into a recession. Money-Flow webpage: https://optimal-money-flow.website/ Notre-Dame Economist's webpage: http://sites.nd.edu/lawrence-c-marsh/home/