Interest rates normally adjust to supply and demand forces and thereby adjust economic events. However, whenever the government imposes stimulus proposals to raise credit and lift the economy, the system is disturbed and thus distorted.
This
unbalances the economy and does the exact opposite of what has been
intended. It’s a lesson politicians wantonly overlook to suit their
election goals.
Ludwig
von Mises wrote fully about the phenomenon in the 1920s but the
economist in fashion during the 1930s recession was, unfortunately,
John Maynard Keynes. He became the political icon of that recovery
movement.
The
Keynes government pump-priming thesis used prolonged stimuli that
actually deepened and helped induce the Great Depression.
Nevertheless, it is the premise of failed current policy. (See
the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® commentaries.
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