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Economics for Politicians Chapter Seven: You Don’t Invest; You Spend [Reader Post]

Welcome back, class! I know that it’s been a while since our last lesson but things have been pretty busy here in Bobville. When we last left off we had to take a step back to explain wealth creation  for some of you who still were having trouble understanding why you do not create jobs. Now we can start moving forward again, and this chapter will be the calm before the storm. Today’s lesson will actually be the lightest in terms of content, but you’re going to need it. The next two lessons on unfunded liabilities and unintended consequences are going to be the most difficult ones for you to grasp, much less accept.

Wikipedia defines investment as “investment is the amount purchased per unit time of goods which are not consumed but are to be used for future production.” In other words, investment is something willingly purchased at the present time in hopes of gaining a return on that investment. Over time, whether or not is is a good or bad investment will be based on growth or failure to grow. This is why government spending can not be called investment in the strictest sense of the word. Society can benefit by items purchased by the government, such as:

If you’ve understood the previous lessons on job creation and wealth creation this concept should be pretty easy for you. Since there is nothing more to teach here I thought I’d add a fun exercise to wrap this up. Presidents like to brag about how much they’ve “invested” in our country, so what is each President’s return on investment? We use this measurement for all real, tangible investments, so why not here? Here are the exercise’s assumptions:


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What does all of this tell us? Not too much, to be perfectly honest. By the measure used a president who decides to have the government confiscate every last piece of private wealth while less rapidly increasing government spending would look like Peter Lynch. At least they would look good for a year until reality sets in, of course.

Up next is Lesson 8 – “Do you know what an unfunded liability is? It’s why you belong in jail!”

Previous Lessons:

Lesson One: It’s Not Your Money

Lesson Two: Intro to Microeconomics, or Why Prices Matter

Lesson Three: Intro to Macroeconomics. or So that’s Where Government Fits In!

Lesson Four: You Don’t Create Jobs – It’s Time to Get Over FDR!

Lesson Four A: By Definition the Government Can Not Create Wealth

Lesson Five: Businesses are Greedy – That’s Not Necessarily a Bad Thing!

Lesson Six: You are Greedy – That is a Bad Thing!

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