Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Robert Reich: "Double the Stimulus"

I like Robert Reich. He has a wonderful style of writing, at once assertive in his rhetoric and reasonable in his tone. In a recent blog post, (3/13/09) he calls for a new stimulus of roughly equal size to the last stimulus of $787 billion.

That is interesting. The President of the European Union, Czech PM Mirek Topolanek has just made headlines by calling the stimulus the way to hell. Topolanek argues that to ramp up spending during a recession is the wrong move. He's going against the grain, and since his center-right party just lost a vote of no confidence, he probably won't have much influence. It does seem like an unusually provocative statement.

Double the stimulus or road to hell?

In Marxian terms, this recession is all about what is called 'unproductive' economic activity, meaning labor which is not designed to produce value (i.e. activities which directly transform raw materials with labor in order to produce something which meets a human need). Unproductive activity is important, yet it does not directly produce an economic surplus (that amount which is produced which is greater than the needs of the direct producer). Over the last 60 years, the US economy has dramatically increased its unproductive activity, shown nicely in Measuring the Wealth of Nations, by Anwar Shaikh and E. Ahmet Tonak.

The activities of the Federal government, though important, are unproductive in the sense that they are not intended to produce a surplus. That means that government must be funded from a portion of the total surplus produced in the US. Since the crisis facing US capitalism is a crisis of unproductive activity, it cannot be solved by increasing the amount of unproductive activity.

In the years to come, we will see a return to productive economic activity: agriculture and manufacturing will once again dominate the US economy.

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