Hub You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > News and Society > Economics > Towards a New Economics

Tags

  • become
  • capital
  • needs
  • global economy
  • recession spread
  • people would

  • Links

  • The Infamous Beardie - Sam (2)
  • Framing Ideas for Cross Stitch
  • Hub You - Towards a New Economics

    Buying a New Laptop: Things to Consider
    The benefits of laptop computers are immense. They are stylish, portable, business-friendly, and a good one can now do almost anything a desktop can do. How different laptop models compare, however, is something that you should explore before buying the first one you see.When inspecting new laptops at a store, it is always a good idea to consider their size and weight, so as to discover which models are portable enough for your lifestyle. A constantly traveling mobile professional, for example, probably wouldn’t be interested in a machine that weighed 8 lbs.Another thing to think about is the ergonomic design of your notebook of choice. You should try out the keyboard and touch pad before buying, to make sure you find it comfortable to work on.As a rule, it is a good idea to find a machine that has at least two USB ports, as well as a FireWire connection if you plan to make use of high-speed peripherals like CD burners.It is also important to think about the specific features you want in a laptop computer. If you frequently need to access the internet outside your home, for example, built-in Wi-Fi connectivity can be a real blessing. If you plan to use your computer for entertainment purposes, an integrated DVD player, coupled with a relatively l
    amount of GDP, in essence ‘value added’, thus growth occurs. But this process needs a rising amount of money in the economy. The source of this money would be the increase in asset wealth produced by the plan we have given.

    Feedback in the asset based free market economy

    We look at feedback in the spending and investment as well as the growth of assets which are hypothesised to not take money from the economy.

    Of ?1 that is earned by a worker, 80p is spent on consumption. This cycles back into another persons earnings which increases the GDP of the economy to ?1.80. This process continues until the earning is 0p.

    Of the ?1 earned by the first worker, 20p is invested in assets. This asset can go up or go down. If the asset doubles to 40p then the economic wealth of the society has doubled. No new money has been injected into the economy when the asset goes up in value but the wealth of the economy has doubled. The Four Walls for Freedom campaign relies on building assets, in this case houses, that raise the wealth of the economy and thus impact on economic growth. When the asset is sold or a loan is secured on it, the worker can spend or invest more growing the economy.

    As poor people would be employed to build the houses in our campaign (see Home page) they would spend much of the money they earn. This moves money moves on to the people from whom they bought goods. These people spend their money so money moves to others and so on. In this way more activity is created by injections of money into the economy. This feedback process, whereby an injection of money flows through the economy in transactions through many people making them engage in activity and also helping to fund investment and thus longer term activity is the essence of w

    4 Ways to Decide What to Write
    If the writing you want to do is work related, it is much easier to decide what to write. You may have a directive to follow and a subject matter that is required for marketing collateral, advertising scripts, or even a white paper. Still, you will need to narrow down the subject matter until it is finite enough to give the attention to detail that is necessary when writing down the information.Work-related writing will require a study of the message that needs to be portrayed. I suggest that you always take the customer’s viewpoint whenever you write. The customer can be either internal or external, there is no difference. Everyone reads from their own point of view, not yours.Think about the WIIFMs (What’s In It For Them). No matter what the subject matter, you have to pique the client interest or they will not read your work. The question may now be, “How do I know what the customer wants?”Customers want information about products and services that concerns their problems. They also want to know the benefits and maybe something about the features. They also want to be coerced.When was the last time you looked forward to reading a product user’s guide, the tech sheet that came with something you purchased, or the brochure before you purchased a
    The solution to poverty

    The idea is to use money gained from a tax on foreign exchange transactions to invest in building houses in the Third World. ?250 Trillion of foreign exchange transactions are made every year(source The Guardian) and estimates are that a 0.5% tax would raise about ?1.25 trillion per year. This could fund a massive program of house building in the Third World. Millions of new houses could be built to high standards as well as infrastructure every year. The poor of the developing world would be employed to build these houses thus stimulating their economies. This income would feedback through their economies over and over kick starting development.

    Poor people in developing countries could be given these houses for free . Over time there would be increases in house prices in those countries and therefore people who were initally poor would become rich. The stimulus to their economies of ?1.25 trillion per year would increase house prices. House prices already go up in developing countries. Brazil experienced rises in house prices, South Africa sees 15% rises every year and Pakistan has just had a major house price boom. The trouble with these asset price rises is that the poor do not benefit.

    The poor in developing countries would demand goods from rich nations which would give more jobs for people like you and me in a rich nation. The poor nations would also have more money to invest in new kinds of production, education and healthcare making the need for aid irrelevant. The source of most economic growth in the last two centuries has come from asset price inflation and we feel that the reason why poor countries are poor is because they do not have assets. Billions of poor people would have a nice home to live in and be well off.

    Debt and Balance of Payments

    Many developing countries’ governments have high levels of debt. There seems to be large amounts of particularly foreign denominated debt held by governments in these nations. We suggest that the reason for this may be a feedback compounding process that raises the level of foreign denominated debt held over time very quickly.

    The process is as follows; foreign debt is taken which goes up by its interest rate. As the debt interest is paid, the exchange rate devalues, due to the massive exchange of money required to pay the debt interest off. This puts the balance of payments into deficit, which itself must be financed by debt, which in turn increases the interest payments. Overall the debt increases taking an ever larger part of the state’s expenditure and leads to default eventually.

    The Prebisch Singer thesis states that developing countries exchange rates have been devaluing. Our above analysis would give the reason for this as the massive outflow of funds to pay back debt as the reason for the pressure on exchange rates. Thus what is called for is a reversal of this with ?1 trillion being pumped into developing countries’ economies every year. This would benefit developed countries because it would reduce the incidence of debt crises and defaults.

    Inflation and assets

    Inflation is not a reality. It is an imposed idealisation put upon data to reduce the primacy of money. Money is what is moving throughout an economy in a feedback process, moving from person to person, stimulating them into activity that is useful for others. Inflation, given by an average basket of goods does show a phenomena of price feedback, that is prices that depend on other prices, but it is an overstated problem. For example, in harsh times people will switch consumption to cheaper goods, goods which may be of a lower quality. Thus the uncertainty of knowing the right basket of goods to calculate inflation is apparent. Thus we can see that the difference between real and non-real growth is near impossible to calculate. Thus we see the primacy of money in an economy. When we unlock ourselves from the inflationary chains we see that things like assets become deeply important for the economy. Looking at inflation adjusted income we would see asset rises as a decline in the growth of the economy. But rather they are the source of development. The myriad channels in which assets raise the amount of money in the economy combined with the fact that asset prices, while increased by the amount of money that goes into the asset market, can go much higher than the total amount of money in the economy. This is because only a small proportion of assets are traded at any one time. Thus most of the assets are held in expectation of capital growth or because they have a useful cultural value, like houses.

    Market size and demand

    The maximum market size of any product is assumed to be finite. A household would only have 1 washing machine, 1 or 2 cars, 1 microwave oven. Thus a policy that caused income to become more evenly distributed would result in greater demand overall. Keynes noted a similar outcome but through a different process. He stated that the proportion of income consumed declines as income rises. This is perhaps given some credibility by our finite market size argument.

    This implies that a policy to make the poor in the world richer would increase the size of the global economy, making everyone better off. This is because the total market size would increase because more people would be able to demand goods.

    Memetic theory of house prices

    A meme is a basic unit of cultural information. It can be anything, any message sent from one person to another. In the housing market, memes propagate of the overall state of the market. System wide memes saying whether the market is thriving or in recession spread. At times the housing market is in boom, thus the boom meme is dominant. At other times it is the slump meme that forms the consensus. A criticism of the ‘four walls for freedom’ campaign is that it would create a surplus of houses and thus reduce the average house price. Our contention is that the reason why house prices go up is a memetic phenomena. They go up because the consensus is that house prices will go up. The stimulus package of construction suggested by our campaign would create the expectations of house price rises.

    Value

    Goods are given value, that is the amount of money someone will pay for them, through the creation of brand names. Some brand names are from small businesses which create goodwill from their interaction with customers. Corporate brand names come from the interaction with society through advertising and Corporate Social Responsbility.

    Before capitalism or the freemarket economy there is no value in society. As capitalism progresses new ideas are created for products, archetypes of the goods that are produced. Historically changing mechanisms come about for the creation of new archetypes and the attachment of value to them by society.

    Thus is places like Africa many things are not given much value. As an economy develops and people’s incomes rise, value rises due to the pressure on prices of goods and services produced by firms. This raises the total amount of GDP, in essence ‘value added’, thus growth occurs. But this process needs a rising amount of money in the economy. The source of this money would be the increase in asset wealth produced by the plan we have given.

    Feedback in the asset based free market economy

    We look at feedback in the spending and investment as well as the growth of assets which are hypothesised to not take money from the economy.

    Of ?1 that is earned by a worker, 80p is spent on consumption. This cycles back into another persons earnings which increases the GDP of the economy to ?1.80. This process continues until the earning is 0p.

    Of the ?1 earned by the first worker, 20p is invested in assets. This asset can go up or go down. If the asset doubles to 40p then the economic wealth of the society has doubled. No new money has been injected into the economy when the asset goes up in value but the wealth of the economy has doubled. The Four Walls for Freedom campaign relies on building assets, in this case houses, that raise the wealth of the economy and thus impact on economic growth. When the asset is sold or a loan is secured on it, the worker can spend or invest more growing the economy.

    As poor people would be employed to build the houses in our campaign (see Home page) they would spend much of the money they earn. This moves money moves on to the people from whom they bought goods. These people spend their money so money moves to others and so on. In this way more activity is created by injections of money into the economy. This feedback process, whereby an injection of money flows through the economy in transactions through many people making them engage in activity and also helping to fund investment and thus longer term activity is the essence of w

    Removing Scratches from a Blackberry
    You all know about how useful the Blackberry/Crackberry is. But what if it has problems?What happens when you get scratches in the screen?First, if you do, you're treading in very troubled waters. Why? Because if it has happened once, it's likely to happen again unless you change some usage/storage habits.Second, if you have scratches, you're jeopardizing the usefulness of your tool. After all, the "tool" part is what sets the blackberry apart from all the other "toy" pda's out there.If you have scratches in your blackberry you could begin to create a mental block to looking it. You might not even realize you're doing it but sub-consciously you might be dreading looking at the screen again because those scratches bother your brain. Eventually you'll stop using it because the scratches bother you too much.So, how do you avoid it?There are 2 ways:1. Prevent them from happening.2. Fix the scratches if they're already there.Preventing ScratchesPreventing scratches is reasonably easy. Either use the belt carrying case or buy a screen protector. The belt case is pretty good for preventing scratches, but it's not guaranteed to do so. You could easily get a little sand in it and it would scratch it all o
    >

    Debt and Balance of Payments

    Many developing countries’ governments have high levels of debt. There seems to be large amounts of particularly foreign denominated debt held by governments in these nations. We suggest that the reason for this may be a feedback compounding process that raises the level of foreign denominated debt held over time very quickly.

    The process is as follows; foreign debt is taken which goes up by its interest rate. As the debt interest is paid, the exchange rate devalues, due to the massive exchange of money required to pay the debt interest off. This puts the balance of payments into deficit, which itself must be financed by debt, which in turn increases the interest payments. Overall the debt increases taking an ever larger part of the state’s expenditure and leads to default eventually.

    The Prebisch Singer thesis states that developing countries exchange rates have been devaluing. Our above analysis would give the reason for this as the massive outflow of funds to pay back debt as the reason for the pressure on exchange rates. Thus what is called for is a reversal of this with ?1 trillion being pumped into developing countries’ economies every year. This would benefit developed countries because it would reduce the incidence of debt crises and defaults.

    Inflation and assets

    Inflation is not a reality. It is an imposed idealisation put upon data to reduce the primacy of money. Money is what is moving throughout an economy in a feedback process, moving from person to person, stimulating them into activity that is useful for others. Inflation, given by an average basket of goods does show a phenomena of price feedback, that is prices that depend on other prices, but it is an overstated problem. For example, in harsh times people will switch consumption to cheaper goods, goods which may be of a lower quality. Thus the uncertainty of knowing the right basket of goods to calculate inflation is apparent. Thus we can see that the difference between real and non-real growth is near impossible to calculate. Thus we see the primacy of money in an economy. When we unlock ourselves from the inflationary chains we see that things like assets become deeply important for the economy. Looking at inflation adjusted income we would see asset rises as a decline in the growth of the economy. But rather they are the source of development. The myriad channels in which assets raise the amount of money in the economy combined with the fact that asset prices, while increased by the amount of money that goes into the asset market, can go much higher than the total amount of money in the economy. This is because only a small proportion of assets are traded at any one time. Thus most of the assets are held in expectation of capital growth or because they have a useful cultural value, like houses.

    Market size and demand

    The maximum market size of any product is assumed to be finite. A household would only have 1 washing machine, 1 or 2 cars, 1 microwave oven. Thus a policy that caused income to become more evenly distributed would result in greater demand overall. Keynes noted a similar outcome but through a different process. He stated that the proportion of income consumed declines as income rises. This is perhaps given some credibility by our finite market size argument.

    This implies that a policy to make the poor in the world richer would increase the size of the global economy, making everyone better off. This is because the total market size would increase because more people would be able to demand goods.

    Memetic theory of house prices

    A meme is a basic unit of cultural information. It can be anything, any message sent from one person to another. In the housing market, memes propagate of the overall state of the market. System wide memes saying whether the market is thriving or in recession spread. At times the housing market is in boom, thus the boom meme is dominant. At other times it is the slump meme that forms the consensus. A criticism of the ‘four walls for freedom’ campaign is that it would create a surplus of houses and thus reduce the average house price. Our contention is that the reason why house prices go up is a memetic phenomena. They go up because the consensus is that house prices will go up. The stimulus package of construction suggested by our campaign would create the expectations of house price rises.

    Value

    Goods are given value, that is the amount of money someone will pay for them, through the creation of brand names. Some brand names are from small businesses which create goodwill from their interaction with customers. Corporate brand names come from the interaction with society through advertising and Corporate Social Responsbility.

    Before capitalism or the freemarket economy there is no value in society. As capitalism progresses new ideas are created for products, archetypes of the goods that are produced. Historically changing mechanisms come about for the creation of new archetypes and the attachment of value to them by society.

    Thus is places like Africa many things are not given much value. As an economy develops and people’s incomes rise, value rises due to the pressure on prices of goods and services produced by firms. This raises the total amount of GDP, in essence ‘value added’, thus growth occurs. But this process needs a rising amount of money in the economy. The source of this money would be the increase in asset wealth produced by the plan we have given.

    Feedback in the asset based free market economy

    We look at feedback in the spending and investment as well as the growth of assets which are hypothesised to not take money from the economy.

    Of ?1 that is earned by a worker, 80p is spent on consumption. This cycles back into another persons earnings which increases the GDP of the economy to ?1.80. This process continues until the earning is 0p.

    Of the ?1 earned by the first worker, 20p is invested in assets. This asset can go up or go down. If the asset doubles to 40p then the economic wealth of the society has doubled. No new money has been injected into the economy when the asset goes up in value but the wealth of the economy has doubled. The Four Walls for Freedom campaign relies on building assets, in this case houses, that raise the wealth of the economy and thus impact on economic growth. When the asset is sold or a loan is secured on it, the worker can spend or invest more growing the economy.

    As poor people would be employed to build the houses in our campaign (see Home page) they would spend much of the money they earn. This moves money moves on to the people from whom they bought goods. These people spend their money so money moves to others and so on. In this way more activity is created by injections of money into the economy. This feedback process, whereby an injection of money flows through the economy in transactions through many people making them engage in activity and also helping to fund investment and thus longer term activity is the essence of w

    Selection Vs Direction
    As I have said many times before in this column it really doesn’t make any difference what you buy – stocks, funds or indexes - it takes smarts to know when to sell. Direction of the general market is more important than selection of any equity.Everyone from the multimillion dollar analyst on Wall Street to your broker to your barber thought he was a financial genius from 1982 to 2000. Anyone using the stock page from the Wall Street Journal as a target could have picked a winner even if his aim was terrible. Just hit the page anywhere and buy that stock. We were in a secular bull market. History shows these last about 16 to 18 years and , unfortunately, are followed by a secular bear market of about the same period of time.During the up time the case for “the market always goes up” becomes crystallized in their brain so that any set back is viewed as a “correction” that will be soon be overcome and the market will be making new high prices again. Unless you are willing to limit the amount of loss from those high prices you will give back all your profits and many times even more.The price of a stock will fluctuate for many reasons usually involving how much profit they are making or anticipate making in the near future. During the past 5 years we have
    ple, in harsh times people will switch consumption to cheaper goods, goods which may be of a lower quality. Thus the uncertainty of knowing the right basket of goods to calculate inflation is apparent. Thus we can see that the difference between real and non-real growth is near impossible to calculate. Thus we see the primacy of money in an economy. When we unlock ourselves from the inflationary chains we see that things like assets become deeply important for the economy. Looking at inflation adjusted income we would see asset rises as a decline in the growth of the economy. But rather they are the source of development. The myriad channels in which assets raise the amount of money in the economy combined with the fact that asset prices, while increased by the amount of money that goes into the asset market, can go much higher than the total amount of money in the economy. This is because only a small proportion of assets are traded at any one time. Thus most of the assets are held in expectation of capital growth or because they have a useful cultural value, like houses.

    Market size and demand

    The maximum market size of any product is assumed to be finite. A household would only have 1 washing machine, 1 or 2 cars, 1 microwave oven. Thus a policy that caused income to become more evenly distributed would result in greater demand overall. Keynes noted a similar outcome but through a different process. He stated that the proportion of income consumed declines as income rises. This is perhaps given some credibility by our finite market size argument.

    This implies that a policy to make the poor in the world richer would increase the size of the global economy, making everyone better off. This is because the total market size would increase because more people would be able to demand goods.

    Memetic theory of house prices

    A meme is a basic unit of cultural information. It can be anything, any message sent from one person to another. In the housing market, memes propagate of the overall state of the market. System wide memes saying whether the market is thriving or in recession spread. At times the housing market is in boom, thus the boom meme is dominant. At other times it is the slump meme that forms the consensus. A criticism of the ‘four walls for freedom’ campaign is that it would create a surplus of houses and thus reduce the average house price. Our contention is that the reason why house prices go up is a memetic phenomena. They go up because the consensus is that house prices will go up. The stimulus package of construction suggested by our campaign would create the expectations of house price rises.

    Value

    Goods are given value, that is the amount of money someone will pay for them, through the creation of brand names. Some brand names are from small businesses which create goodwill from their interaction with customers. Corporate brand names come from the interaction with society through advertising and Corporate Social Responsbility.

    Before capitalism or the freemarket economy there is no value in society. As capitalism progresses new ideas are created for products, archetypes of the goods that are produced. Historically changing mechanisms come about for the creation of new archetypes and the attachment of value to them by society.

    Thus is places like Africa many things are not given much value. As an economy develops and people’s incomes rise, value rises due to the pressure on prices of goods and services produced by firms. This raises the total amount of GDP, in essence ‘value added’, thus growth occurs. But this process needs a rising amount of money in the economy. The source of this money would be the increase in asset wealth produced by the plan we have given.

    Feedback in the asset based free market economy

    We look at feedback in the spending and investment as well as the growth of assets which are hypothesised to not take money from the economy.

    Of ?1 that is earned by a worker, 80p is spent on consumption. This cycles back into another persons earnings which increases the GDP of the economy to ?1.80. This process continues until the earning is 0p.

    Of the ?1 earned by the first worker, 20p is invested in assets. This asset can go up or go down. If the asset doubles to 40p then the economic wealth of the society has doubled. No new money has been injected into the economy when the asset goes up in value but the wealth of the economy has doubled. The Four Walls for Freedom campaign relies on building assets, in this case houses, that raise the wealth of the economy and thus impact on economic growth. When the asset is sold or a loan is secured on it, the worker can spend or invest more growing the economy.

    As poor people would be employed to build the houses in our campaign (see Home page) they would spend much of the money they earn. This moves money moves on to the people from whom they bought goods. These people spend their money so money moves to others and so on. In this way more activity is created by injections of money into the economy. This feedback process, whereby an injection of money flows through the economy in transactions through many people making them engage in activity and also helping to fund investment and thus longer term activity is the essence of w

    When You Have Decided What You Want You Will Have To Invest A Little Money To Make Money
    When you have decided what you want you will have to invest a little money to make money, nothing worthwhile comes without cost to you. Check if there are any guarantees offered if you are not entirely satisfied and whether there is any training available. This is important for people who are not well acquainted with the internet.Many people do not make a success of their own business as they do not enjoy cold calling and dealing with prospective customers. This is probably the reason that so many people find it easier to do business on the internet as they are not in physical contact with their clients.There are many options open to anyone who wishes to start their own home based business. The first thing is to decide what it is that you wish to start doing. Choose something that will interest you and will motivate you to work hard at it until it becomes a success. Then you will have to keep on working at it to keep it being successful.Owning an internet based business is what many people want. It might sound difficult if you do not have sufficient knowledge of the internet to get a business started. If this is what you want and are willing to learn it can become a very profitable business.Many employees constantly think about being thei
    ecause more people would be able to demand goods.

    Memetic theory of house prices

    A meme is a basic unit of cultural information. It can be anything, any message sent from one person to another. In the housing market, memes propagate of the overall state of the market. System wide memes saying whether the market is thriving or in recession spread. At times the housing market is in boom, thus the boom meme is dominant. At other times it is the slump meme that forms the consensus. A criticism of the ‘four walls for freedom’ campaign is that it would create a surplus of houses and thus reduce the average house price. Our contention is that the reason why house prices go up is a memetic phenomena. They go up because the consensus is that house prices will go up. The stimulus package of construction suggested by our campaign would create the expectations of house price rises.

    Value

    Goods are given value, that is the amount of money someone will pay for them, through the creation of brand names. Some brand names are from small businesses which create goodwill from their interaction with customers. Corporate brand names come from the interaction with society through advertising and Corporate Social Responsbility.

    Before capitalism or the freemarket economy there is no value in society. As capitalism progresses new ideas are created for products, archetypes of the goods that are produced. Historically changing mechanisms come about for the creation of new archetypes and the attachment of value to them by society.

    Thus is places like Africa many things are not given much value. As an economy develops and people’s incomes rise, value rises due to the pressure on prices of goods and services produced by firms. This raises the total amount of GDP, in essence ‘value added’, thus growth occurs. But this process needs a rising amount of money in the economy. The source of this money would be the increase in asset wealth produced by the plan we have given.

    Feedback in the asset based free market economy

    We look at feedback in the spending and investment as well as the growth of assets which are hypothesised to not take money from the economy.

    Of ?1 that is earned by a worker, 80p is spent on consumption. This cycles back into another persons earnings which increases the GDP of the economy to ?1.80. This process continues until the earning is 0p.

    Of the ?1 earned by the first worker, 20p is invested in assets. This asset can go up or go down. If the asset doubles to 40p then the economic wealth of the society has doubled. No new money has been injected into the economy when the asset goes up in value but the wealth of the economy has doubled. The Four Walls for Freedom campaign relies on building assets, in this case houses, that raise the wealth of the economy and thus impact on economic growth. When the asset is sold or a loan is secured on it, the worker can spend or invest more growing the economy.

    As poor people would be employed to build the houses in our campaign (see Home page) they would spend much of the money they earn. This moves money moves on to the people from whom they bought goods. These people spend their money so money moves to others and so on. In this way more activity is created by injections of money into the economy. This feedback process, whereby an injection of money flows through the economy in transactions through many people making them engage in activity and also helping to fund investment and thus longer term activity is the essence of w

    Percolating and SEO – The Long Term Approach
    Time is against you when trying to optimize a site, particularly if you have a brand new domain and site. Letting a site percolate is sometimes a good strategy to undertake.If you work on the net, you probably drink coffee. For those of you who don’t, percolate refers to letting the coffee brew until it is just right, to wit, waiting. In theory, you need to let the robust flavor build to a perfect taste. Of course, I heat mine up in the microwave most of the time, but I digress.If you believe in search engine optimization, you know time is an issue. Simply put, a site tends to rank better the older it is. You can do everything perfectly from the optimization point of view and it really doesn’t matter. This is particularly true with Google and its lovely sandbox. Even when you pop out of the sandbox, it doesn’t mean you are immediately going to go high on major keywords. Instead, it is a sometimes slow process as your site ages like fine wine. I am convinced someone at Google loves wine and configures the ranking algorithm along the same lines.Anyway, you can fight the good fight against the time problem or stop wasting your time. Trying to push a site that is two months old up in the rankings is akin to having sex with an elephant. It takes a lot of ene
    amount of GDP, in essence ‘value added’, thus growth occurs. But this process needs a rising amount of money in the economy. The source of this money would be the increase in asset wealth produced by the plan we have given.

    Feedback in the asset based free market economy

    We look at feedback in the spending and investment as well as the growth of assets which are hypothesised to not take money from the economy.

    Of ?1 that is earned by a worker, 80p is spent on consumption. This cycles back into another persons earnings which increases the GDP of the economy to ?1.80. This process continues until the earning is 0p.

    Of the ?1 earned by the first worker, 20p is invested in assets. This asset can go up or go down. If the asset doubles to 40p then the economic wealth of the society has doubled. No new money has been injected into the economy when the asset goes up in value but the wealth of the economy has doubled. The Four Walls for Freedom campaign relies on building assets, in this case houses, that raise the wealth of the economy and thus impact on economic growth. When the asset is sold or a loan is secured on it, the worker can spend or invest more growing the economy.

    As poor people would be employed to build the houses in our campaign (see Home page) they would spend much of the money they earn. This moves money moves on to the people from whom they bought goods. These people spend their money so money moves to others and so on. In this way more activity is created by injections of money into the economy. This feedback process, whereby an injection of money flows through the economy in transactions through many people making them engage in activity and also helping to fund investment and thus longer term activity is the essence of why the free market economy works so well. The problem with the free market economy is that there are sinks (as in a dynamic system) where most money flows towards without being recycled in the economy. One of the reasons why there are sinks is because many people do not have much money thus there is a lessening of economic activity due to poverty. This is the situation we see in developing countries.

    Assets price growth

    The essential property of assets is that they can grow to very high amounts, well out of proportion to the amount of money in an economy. The reason why is because only a small part of the total amount of assets in an economy are traded. The money that supports asset price growth is thus concentrated, so a boost to the economy can raise asset prices.

    Housing Wealth

    Some would argue that raising the amount of houses in poor countries would reduce their average price. This is a crude demand curve analysis. However, demand shifts up when there is a rise in wealth. Furthermore building large amounts of houses as in our plan raises and redistributes the total housing wealth which is average price times number of houses. This would have an impact on the economy even if prices were slow to increase.

    See full details on our website and join our campaign on www.boutiquebrighton.info

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.iadvice.info/article/189754/iadvice-Towards-a-New-Economics.html">Towards a New Economics</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.iadvice.info/article/189754/iadvice-Towards-a-New-Economics.html]Towards a New Economics[/url]

    Related Articles:

    RETAIL GREETERS: Sales Builders or Customer Turnoff?

    Rewards Credit Card – How to Find the Best One for You

    Where To Find Adobe Photoshop Tutorials

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com