Dunno, if anyone is reading this stuff. My last 2 posts were to show that the PTB have no clue what to do about the structural problems. The system is bing bled white by banking powers that continue to withdraw wealth from the economy and stash it out of circulation. This gives them a lot of wealth and control. The PTB have gone overboard and crashed the system. There are many arguments that this is the desired end result to achieve world GOV and fascist control.
I'm sure that this is true for some circles.
I'm also sure that there are many other "power groups" that recognize that a a socialist command economy would be the death of most commerce. Fidel Castro just admitted that Cuba's economic system flat out does not work. Vladimir Putin warned Obama NOT to try socialism,,, it just does not work. The bankers are going to ride this Keynesian horse right off a cliff. Then what?
There are solutions. C.H. Douglas proffered 'Social Credit" many years ago. The current problem is that people don't have enough purchasing power to keep the economy running and lubricated. The whole fiat money system is designed as a ripoff. Keynesian economics could work,, maybe. It requires GOV to store up a surplus in the good years. NOT likely to happen.
Social Credit looks pretty good. It might need a bit of tweaking but, it looks far more stable than Keynes ever did.
Just so people are aware of alternatives to the current system, I'm going to post ideas that I believe have merit. In the coming years, it's going to become painfully obvious that we need a whole new system.
These systems would, of course, take away much of the power of the bankers.
"What Really Works" -- Joel Skousen's framework of an honest and rational market system solution to the current economic crisis -- his alternative -- his answer to my "socialist" Social Credit proposals. Worth reading very closely.
Second letter from Joel Skousen:
To: Dick Eastman
Sent: Sunday, September 05, 2010 8:46 AM
Subject: Re:What really works
Sorry, about my dismissive comment, but I really get irritated when people on our side can't see that the insider controlled system, paying themselves interest on money they create is NOT the free market at work. Your turning to an outright socialist solution rather that see what the free market could actually do, was what turned me off. So, while I don't have time to provide you a complete solution, I'll provide the basic framework.
First, you have to start from basic principles: People are not equal in talents, abilities, nor work ethic, and never will be. In short, people differ in true worth, and that worth must never be dictated by others, but each person is free to present his worth as he wants it viewed, and every other person is equally free to judge another's worth as he sees fit---especially as it involves spending his money or property in hiring the services of another. Any system that restricts people's judgment restricts a fundamental right to discriminate. Any system to rewards (hands out money, etc) equally and not according to worth distorts what is true and fair and creates inequalities elsewhere. (It also destroys the purposes of God on earth in testing people according to individual worth)
Second, The so-called elite are never smart enough to make economic and trade decisions for others. Nor can any system collect all of the information necessary minute by minute and condense it fast enough so that experts can make all of the decisions necessary for markets to operate. Only individuals negotiating within each person's limited sphere of interest are capable of making decisions about their best interests (precisely because they only have to deal with one decision at a time--not that of everyone else). Mistakes are sometimes made in these small trade decisions (pay too much, or don't judge quality very well), but over time, people learn to correct bad decision or they get poorer and poorer. The poor will always be with us, but it's only fair when poverty is the result of chronic bad judgement and no arbitrary restrictions against opportunity.
The free market, hence, is a NON-economic system---no system of control or direction, just unlimited free choice with a tight legal structure that ensures that fundamental property rights (correctly defined) are protected equally, and that no one can aggress or defraud another. No one is allowed to direct any economic choice by force of government (as to who should buy or sell, hire or not, and at what price). Everything is left to free negotiation and choice, and one can't force another to even enter into negotiations---that too must be free.
Third, The key, then is the constitutional legal structure that prohibits redistribution of wealth, allows for unlimited voluntary choice and discrimination in judgment so as to ensure that people are free to make the most of their negotiations with others in their own worth or the worth of the product they want to sell. I have outlined this legal system in my writings on Law and Government at my website
www.joelskousen.com
Fourth, As to money, You have to get government out of the money business altogether except to ensure that fraud in private money is not taking place. Starting with the premise that everyone has the right to trade voluntarily and without coercion, anyone can create bills of exchange (money) based upon stored commodities in their possession. The value of those bills of exchange will depend upon the perceived worth of the product, the insured ability to redeem those bills in such a commodity and other things such as how easy is it to take possession, storage costs and tradability of the stored product to others. So, gold, silver, platinum, have turned out to be the most favored items for redeemable bills of exchange---because they pack a lot of value in a small package, are durable, divisable etc. Wheat and corn have also been successful before, although the bulk is a problem if you want redeemability. So, in short, money is all commodity based and 100% redeemable. Government checks the warehouses to ensure that no one is printing more bills than there is commodity to back it. In other words, absolute no fiat money is allowed.
Eventually, the companies (private banks) with the strongest warehouses, best products, and best record of safety will win out, and their money will become more desirable (and demand for it rises). That also raises the price of things in certain bills, and allows for other bills of exchange to compete at lower prices. Competing money is always good, and it keeps the system honest, in concert with government inspections.
That said, Conspiracies among powerful and wealthy men will always exist, and great care has to be taken to make sure they don't control the legal process of inspection and prosecution for fraud. But at least with this non-economic system, there is no mechanism for them to gain government backed monopoly or control of money. When all money and trade is based on 100% value of product, economic growth is slow and gradual and safe. Booms and Busts come from fiat money and credit which takes off rapidly when there is no req. for 100% commodity backing. All of the evils of speculation come from the ability of people to make deals without full backing (naked shorts, buying on margin without someone putting up full collateral, etc)---make all those things illegal and you solve all the great evils of the derivatives scandal and mortgage backed scandals etc. there are a lot more complexities than that, but that's how you shut down the advantage the Rothchilds and others have created.
The other big issue is proper taxation, which I cover in my Law and Government section. In essence, taxes have to be directly related to a government service received (lots of user fees rather than general taxation), and then all general taxes (courts, police and military) have to be allocated in direct proportion to the two types of entities that are protected by those general government services: people (head tax) and property. There would be no taxes on income or business transactions allowed since those invade privacy and distort trade. If government has to use business to collect a user fee (such as a gasoline tax) they must pay the business to do so---can't do it by force.
This system works, is fair, and deters fraud, and denies politicians the ability to attract votes by promises of benefits of freebes.
Fiat money and "social credit" systems, in contrast, are based upon the concept of getting something for nothing---and violate all principles of reward according to worth. Currently, only the insider bankers get something for nothing (within the money system). That is why there is heavy inflation mainly within the speculative economy, and little is flowing over to the consumer economy (the Speculative markets have become an economy within the economy, and only big insider players have full access to this realm). The Social credit system pumps the money directly into the people's hands and thus is highly inflationary to consumer prices within the real economy, as I stated before.
Neither is good, just or fair to the pool of existing money which has been traded for fair value of people's efforts (even if it started out as fiat money). You can't have a system that mixes a system of money based upon both fair voluntary exchange and a free handout---because the free handout portion will eventually destroy the incentive to use it to trade for real value). Once a free handout or credit is given, it is directly inflationary---and it instantly reduces people's former value traded money. Within the value traded bulk of old money, there always exists a resistance to price increases, since people only have a limited amount of money. Once new fiat money is injected, to the receivers, their resistance to buying more is sudden decreased, and prices will start to rise till they reach resistance again. If a steady or regular flow of fiat money is forthcoming, there will surely arise an inflationary mentality of "get rid of the new money quickly" before prices rise again. There is no way to keep any sense of a store of value in money that is openly inflated. Currently, the government hides the inflation by fudging the numbers and injecting new money only into a few places with the elite, so it takes time to trickled down. Only the first users get the benefit of buying with prices that have not yet inflated. But the social credit system doesn't solve anything by injecting equally to everyone---it only massively accelerates the velocity of money and inflation---which quickly becomes self-defeating.
In summary, While the free market can't guarantee equality of result (nothing can, because equality never can exist and never will exist), it alone guarantees that at least the inequalities will be based upon fairness---that each person is receiving as close to his or her own truth worth. this happens because each person is always seeking to have his worth accepted by others as he feels it is, and everyone else is seeking to make sure they don't pay out more rewards than is necessary. That tension is what keeps things always moving towards fairness. The people who have inflated values of their own worth are stymied by people's ability reject them and to not pay what they want, and greedy people are stymied (over time) by people's ability to move on and seek better returns elsewhere, leaving them only with the lower worth people. Sure, inequalities and taking advantage of people's hardship situations do exists but the more freedom to maneuver that exists, the quicker they can be bypassed.
This may not be the final answer, but, it may very well be a step towards the right answer.
Dan
I don't post things because I believe that they are the absolute truth. I post them because I believe that they should be considered.