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"To act within the marketplace, but not to be governed by the values of the market-place, is a considerable personal discipline."

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"A customer acts within the framework of commerce. An audient acts within the framework of a listening community. When a musician believes that musicking is a commercial activity, the music dies inside them.

"To act within the marketplace, but not to be governed by the values of the market-place, is a considerable personal discipline. To see the audient as consumer denies them their humanity. They become a purchasing unit. Our human interaction ends with the completion of the transaction. When musician & audience combine to bring music flying into our world, to be parents to the music, life begins again.

“'Audient' is a description, not a label."

~ Robert Fripp from his Diary - April 15th. 1999
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gangsterofboats
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Does Demand Create Supply?

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Amongst the first reactions when Nicola Willis announced a coming cut in Wellington's bureaucrats came the outcry that the reduced consumer spending by those unemployed grey ones will keep Wellington "at the bottom of the pack in terms of things like economic activity," their reduced demand leading (so it's said) to a downward spiral.

The most cited author of that premise is alleged economist Nick Brunsdon, who seems to labour under the illusion that economic causality can be reversed, that demand induced by govt deficits somehow creates its own productive supply -- that if government keeps on over- spending and injecting new money into the economy, then productive wealth will follow. Fortunately, Frank Shostak is here in this Guest Post to dispel that destructive illusion ...

Does Demand Create Supply?
by Frank Shostak

By popular thinking, increases in demand cause economic growth. According to such thought, whenever the economy falls into a recession what is required is to strengthen demand. Since government is seen as an important part of total demand, what is then required is to increase government outlays, thereby lifting overall demand and hence increasing economic growth.

According to the popular view, it is also possible to strengthen overall demand through the inflationary increases in money supply. With more money in their possession, and for given prices, the so-called real balances will increase and this, in turn, will strengthen individuals’ expenditure on goods and services. This allegedly will strengthen the economy’s overall demand and will strengthen economic growth. A decline in the prices for a given money supply will also boost the real balances and thus the economic growth. 

But does it make sense that demand is the key driver of the economy?

In the free market economy, wealth-generators do not produce everything for their own consumption. Part of their production is used to exchange for the products of other producers. Hence, in the free market economy, production precedes consumption. This means that something is exchanged for something else. This also means that an increase in the production of goods and services sets in motion an increase in the demand for goods and services. According to David Ricardo,

No man produces but with a view to consume or sell, and he never sells but with an intention to purchase some other commodity, which may be immediately useful to him, or which may contribute to future production. By producing, then, he necessarily becomes either the consumer of his own goods, or the purchaser and consumer of the goods of some other person.

An individual’s demand is constrained by his ability to produce goods demanded by others. The more goods that an individual can produce, the more goods he can demand.

Expanding Private Savings: Key to Economic Growth

Without the expansion and the enhancement of the production structure, it is difficult to increase the supply of goods and services. The expansion and enhancement of the production structure hinges on the expansion of production, private saving, and capital investment. Saving supports individuals in the various stages of production. It supports individuals that are employed in the enhancement and the expansion of the production structure. Hence, what matters for economic growth is not just tools, machinery, and labour, but saving and investment in capital goods.

Government Is Not a Wealth-Generator

Contrary to popular thinking, the government does not produce any wealth. Increases in government spending cannot grow the economy. By nature, the government must take from the private, productive economy to facilitate any of its actions. By doing this, the government weakens the wealth-generating process and undermines prospects for economic recovery during a downturn. According to Murray Rothbard,

Since genuine demand only comes from the supply of products, and since the government is not productive, it follows that government spending cannot truly increase demand.

Likewise, an increase in money supply only sets in motion an exchange of nothing for something. This means a weakening in the process of wealth formation and leads to economic impoverishment.

An important factor that makes the fiscal and monetary stimulus appear to “work” is if the amount of private savings is large enough to support non-wealth generating activities while still permitting a growth rate in the activities of wealth generators. It also gives the appearance of wealth as new sectors are stimulated. Additionally, if funded by inflation, the benefits of inflation appear early and are only realised later.

If, however, voluntary saving is declining, then, regardless of any increase in government spending and inflation by the central bank, overall economic activity cannot be revived. In this case, the more the government spends, and the more the central bank inflates, the more will be taken from wealth-generators, thereby weakening any prospect for a recovery. Additionally, these measures will further distort the economy.

As one can see, not only does the increase in the expansionary fiscal and monetary policies not raise overall output, but, on the contrary, it leads to a weakening in the process of wealth generation in general. According to Jean Baptiste Say,

. . .the only real consumers are those who produce on their part, because they alone can buy the produce of others, [while]. . .barren consumers can buy nothing except by the means of value created by [actual] producers.

Conclusion

By popular thinking, increases in government spending and central bank inflation strengthens the economy’s overall demand. This, in turn, sets in motion increases in the production of goods and services. What we have here is a claim that “demand creates supply.” However, to be able to exchange something for goods and services, individuals must first have something that others want. This means that, in order to demand goods and services, individuals must produce something useful first. Hence, supply drives demand and not the other way around. Governments, by nature, must take from the private, productive sector in order to fund their activities. Increases in government spending and the money supply growth rate results in the diversion of savings from the wealth-generators to non-wealth-generators, thus undermining the wealth generating process.

* * * * 

Frank Shostak is an Associated Scholar of the Mises Institute. His consulting firm, Applied Austrian School Economics, provides in-depth assessments and reports of financial markets and global economies. He received his bachelor’s degree from Hebrew University, his master’s degree from Witwatersrand University, and his PhD from Rands Afrikaanse University and has taught at the University of Pretoria and the Graduate Business School at Witwatersrand University. Frank’s publishes frequent posts on economics and the markets on his Substack page.

His post first appeared at the Mises Wire.

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gangsterofboats
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The Communist Bait and Switch on “Rights”

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One moment they speak the language of “human rights.” The next moment they openly advocate violating actual rights against anyone who refuses to surrender their life, labor, property, or success to collective demands.

That contradiction is not an accident. It is the core of the ideology.

Because what they call “rights” are usually not rights at all. They are entitlements.

A real right is something that requires only non interference from others. Freedom of speech, property rights, voluntary exchange, self ownership. Your rights do not require the forced labor or sacrifice of another person.

An entitlement is the opposite. It is a demand that someone else provide something for you. Housing. Income. Healthcare. Education. “Living wages.” Debt forgiveness. These things do not magically appear. They require production. And production requires producers.

That is why socialist movements inevitably drift toward coercion. Once need becomes a moral claim, force becomes unavoidable. If someone refuses to surrender what they earned, they are treated not as an individual with rights, but as an obstacle to the collective.

Notice how quickly the rhetoric shifts.

At first it sounds compassionate: “We just want fairness.” “We just want everyone taken care of.” “We just want economic justice.”

But the moment someone says: “No, I do not consent to funding your demands,”

the mask slips.

Suddenly success becomes “greed.” Ownership becomes “exploitation.” Disagreement becomes “violence.” And productive people become enemies to be controlled, punished, or stripped of rights.

This is why communist systems throughout history always become authoritarian. Not because every leader was uniquely evil, but because the ideology itself contains no limiting principle against force once collective need overrides individual rights.

If the group is morally supreme, then anything can be justified in service to the group.

Speech restrictions become acceptable. Property seizures become acceptable. Political persecution becomes acceptable. Even imprisonment or mass killing becomes rationalized as necessary for “the people.”

And the tragic part is that many supporters never recognize the transition because they were taught to see morality itself through the lens of sacrifice. They believe virtue means surrendering more and demanding more surrender from others.

The result is a worldview driven less by principle than by tribal power.

That is why socialist rhetoric constantly relies on emotional manipulation, envy, and resentment. The movement survives by convincing people that someone else’s success is the reason for their suffering, and that freedom itself is unjust unless its outcomes are equalized.

But equalization cannot happen voluntarily at scale. It always requires political force.

Which means the ideology eventually reveals what it was always about: not protecting rights, but controlling people.

A society built on actual rights says: “No person may be sacrificed to another.”

A collectivist society says: “Some people must be sacrificed for others.”

That is the real divide.



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Stop Pleading for Your Wealth: A Moral Case Against Mamdani’s Attacks

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Stop Pleading for Your Wealth: A Moral Case Against Mamdani’s Attacks

Citadel CEO Ken Griffin is courageously fighting a "creepy" campaign to tax his wealth, but his defense inadvertently lends support to Mamdani and his socialist supporters

The post Stop Pleading for Your Wealth: A Moral Case Against Mamdani’s Attacks appeared first on New Ideal - Reason | Individualism | Capitalism.

 







Download video: https://www.youtube.com/embed/FLKZnVB4F9k
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Marc Andreessen Fails to Recognize the Importance of Introspection

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Marc Andreessen Fails to Recognize the Importance of Introspection

The post Marc Andreessen Fails to Recognize the Importance of Introspection appeared first on New Ideal - Reason | Individualism | Capitalism.

 







Download video: https://www.youtube.com/embed/yKYKHBdO6-I



Download audio: https://media.blubrry.com/new_ideal_ari/content.blubrry.com/new_ideal_ari/20260528_Andreesen-Introspection.mp3
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“Diversity Is Our Strength”

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“Diversity is our strength” began as an appeal for tolerance and inclusion—who could oppose that? It has since morphed into the opposite.
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