Yup, those numbers understate the size of the loss to the economy. People who are under-utilized, or people who are not actively looking for work, but who would if there was work to be had.261252 said:I am not sure how they arrive at those numbers but a lot of people have questioned them.
How many TV sets, cars, houses, condos, suits, shoes, watches, computers, Starbucks coffee, etc. does one need/want? I need another 3-4 women but that is another story. Besides, I am currently "between projects" so I can't afford that second Mercedes.fuji said:Does that mean that everyone has already got everything they need, and nobody wants anything more?
I think the answer is, "more than they have", and I think that is always the answer. I think human desire is unlimited.Rockslinger said:How many TV sets, cars, houses, condos, suits, shoes, watches, computers, Starbucks coffee, etc. does one need/want?
But, but you are "Mr. Lucky". If this can happen to you, it can happen to anyone.Mr. Lucky said:I'm applying today for unemployment.
Yup it is true there will always be a good solution.Rockslinger said:But, but you are "Mr. Lucky". If this can happen to you, it can happen to anyone.
If you don't like over capacity, how about insufficient demand.... different sides of the same coin.....fuji said:That's a funny concept, "overcapacity worldwide". Does that mean that everyone has already got everything they need, and nobody wants anything more?
If you took money out of the equation the economy is about producing something and trading it to someone else. The more stuff that gets created, the more everybody has. Money is supposed to smooth that process out, but plainly sometimes it makes a hash of it.
At some level this is not about "overcapacity" but about something getting gummed up somewhere that has interfered with the trading relationship--as I imagine there are people who want those excess goods and services, and that those people are capable of producing something useful in return.
Sure as a local micro-economic concept; but this is not micro-economics. What specifically do you mean by "insufficient demand" at a macro, global level?onthebottom said:If you don't like over capacity, how about insufficient demand.... different sides of the same coin....OTB
I think demand might be desire plus ability to pay plus confidence.... if you think things are good and are going to stay that way you spend - perhaps even spend forward, if you're worried about your job then you pile it up and wait for the sun to come out. That's what's happening (look at retail sales figures).fuji said:Sure as a local micro-economic concept; but this is not micro-economics. What specifically do you mean by "insufficient demand" at a macro, global level?
Demand is desire plus ability to pay. The problem is not with desire, but with ability to pay--but the ability to pay is itself being curtailed by the insufficient demand.
The whole thing really is a market failure, not an overcapacity issue. If it weren't for the market failure people would have the ability to pay.
Blaming the recession on "insufficient demand" or "overcapacity" is ultimately circular reasoning.
How can this be???? Everyone I work with has a job....fuji said:Recession cranking through jobs, unemployment rate in Ontario cities now ranges from about 8% in Toronto to 12% in Windsor.
So riddle me this, why is gas consumption down when the price has dropped by half?fuji said:Sure, I agree--confidence is a big factor. The market failure is at least partly the result of people losing confidence in the market. I just don't think that is captured by terms like "ovecapacity" and "insufficient demand" which I think are circular at a global macro-economic level.
In proper micro economics demand is specified as a trade-off between two or more resources: You can have more of A in exchange for less of B, and so on. At a global macro level there is no trade-off against total consumption: We consume as much GDP as we possibly can--demand is infinite. Consumption is limited by resources, technology, productivity, etc., and in this case, market failure and psychology.