"You may decide this is much ado about nothing, but it does bring more clarity to the role of the individual in the economy. It should also help us think through some tricky economic problems. For example, it’s now easier to see why monetary policy shouldn’t, over time, allow the creation of new money to outpace the potential of the real economy to produce goods and services.
It also helps us think more clearly about our Social Security and Medicare problems. The cures can’t come from more money or financial schemes alone, without a comparable expansion of real economic growth in the future. Real growth must be fast enough to redeem the growth in financial claims on it in the future."
Here's my comment:
“The cures can’t come from more money or financial schemes alone, without a comparable expansion of real economic growth in the future. Real growth must be fast enough to redeem the growth in financial claims on it in the future.”
For me, this should always be the goal. Even if we want a less intrusive government, it can only come with a middle class that feels middle class, and not just hovering above being destitute. That’s why I feel we need growth, but also need to worry about inequality at the same time. But without growth, things are much harder. Period.
Theoretically, our decisions should be based on what are the policies that help our overall growth, increasing the pie, as it were, and not on the portions. But portion size does matter in the real world, and we have to deal with that. After all, a pie is meant to be eaten, and we eat to live.
— Don the libertarian Democrat