What is Safnerism?

A background and breakdown of what “Safnerism” is all about. The concepts that I agree with, the labels I disagree with, and my opinions on discussion in general. This is not permanent as new ideas will emerge over time.

Warning: I had some fun with this.

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From My Tumblr:

Paul Krugman’s Op-Ed in the New York Times blasts the “conventional wisdom” calling for Austerity measures (reducing national debts & deficits in lieu of complete international bankruptcy) as he looks on “with amazement and horror.”

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From My Tumblr:

Call this a rant, but it comes with valuable socio-economic lessons.

I’ve been taking some hours at a U-Pick berry farm in my hometown, the same one where I worked all throughout High School.  Essentially I sit at the stand, direct customers where they can pick blue/strawberries, and then ring them up when they’re done.  Don’t get me wrong, it’s a fantastic job, and the people are great generally, but sometimes there are those annoying self-centered customers.  We’ve all encountered “that guy” somewhere or other.

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Common sense economic lessons for the interested layman. How a free market economy works, from an Austrian School perspective.
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Lesson Three: Direct Exchange.

An overview of the possibilities of interpersonal interaction with a specific focus on mutual exchange of goods between individuals. An elaboration of price theory – what are prices, how are they determined, supply & demand analysis, and more analytical tools. A discussion of markets, their allocative efficiency, the benefits of free trade, and how markets are self-correcting. All of this done abstracting away from money and complexities in order to comprehend the nature of exchange and the market – skills to be applied to all future lessons and analyses.

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F.A. Hayek Contra the Nobel Prize

On 28 April 2010, in economics, by Ryan

Just found this gem – F.A. Hayek’s speech at the Nobel Banquet on 10 December 1974.  Hayek’s Prize Lecture, “The Pretense of Knowledge” is a classic work chastising the mainstream of the economics profession for their fatal conceits, but this quick candid speech captures the dangers of such social prestige gained by economists.  Nobel Laureates must not be regarded as demagogues to be praised, lest we follow Paul Krugman into neomercantilist chaos.  I particularly enjoy the Marshall quote.

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Standard & Poor, one of the largest rating agencies just officially downgraded Greek sovereign debt to “BB+ with a negative outlook” which has passed the threshold for “junk bond” status.  Greek debt is practically worthless as an investment.  S&P has also just downgraded Portugal’s debt.  The PIGS countries (Portugal, Italy, Greece, & Spain), countries with unsound financial practices (massive government expenditures & borrowing far exceeding tax revenues) are falling like flies, and provide a lesson for us here in the U.S.

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[This term paper was originally written for ECON 2110 W - History of Economic Thought]


The “Duality” of Say’s Law

A Restoration of J.B. Say’s Original Intentions

I. INTRODUCTION

The concept known as “Say’s Law of Markets” has been challenged many times over the centuries but the actual theory remains to be disproven.  During every economic depression, businessmen and economists proclaim it null due to “underconsumption,” “overproduction,” and the presence of “general gluts.”  Jean-Baptiste Say, a laissez-faire economist who wrote on the subject of gluts casually and without revolutionary intentions, is traditionally understood to have proved these phenomena impossible.  In turn, history is supposed to have proved Say wrong, and his law is now widely considered refuted.  The alleged law, however, has only been attacked on the terms of its hecklers, and has always been straw-manned as a vulgar apologia.  Economists act as if there are two Say’s Laws; the first, (Say’s original insight) arguing that, provided a functional free market with sound money, general gluts will not occur; the second (a vulgar creation considered to be the “disproven” Say’s Law) declaring that general gluts are always and everywhere impossible.

Say’s Law has been challenged, among others, in two famous episodes, first by Reverend Thomas Malthus in 1820, and more famously by John Maynard Keynes in 1936.  There can be no denying that general gluts did appear in 1816-1823 and in 1929-1941; doing so would be to advocate the vulgar Say’s Law.  The crucial point is that prolonged gluts were not caused by the free market, but by the rampant government interventions in the market during these historic episodes, acquitting Say by default.  Both detractors observed largely circumstantial evidence which provided the impetus for them to attempt pure “theories of underconsumption” contra Say’s Law.  They observed that there were gluts, but failed to fully comprehend what had caused them.  Both Malthus and Keynes were attacking a straw man, blaming the free market for the problems of government, and ironically appealing to the latter to fix the former.

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