TEXT SIZE: A | A | A          Make LTN your homepage

February 22, 2012 -- Updated January 26, 2012 04:34 HKT

Yes, Obama is a Marxist

Without passing judgement, and simply putting Obama’s economic policy in to the correct economic location, Obama is a Marxist.

The Obama administration favors progressive taxes on the rich to redistribute income and wealth from winners to losers and to ensure that all pay their fair share. (As he has said: “When you spread the wealth around, it’s good for everybody.”)

Obama advocates a strong state that offers the “positive right” of political and economic justice to its citizens. He complains that the U.S. Constitution is a “charter of negative liberties,” that dictates what government “can’t do to you, but it doesn’t say what the federal government or the state government must do on your behalf.”

“The great task before our founders was putting into practice the ideal that government could simultaneously serve liberty and advance the common good. and Government, he believed, had an important role to play in advancing our common prosperity.” – Barack Obama

Now to clarify the placement of Obama in the Marxist camp, here is a definition of the various schools of economic thought.

The word economics is derived from oikonomikos, which means skilled in household management.

Although the word is very old, the discipline of economics as we understand it today is a relatively recent development. Modern economic thought emerged in the 17th and 18th centuries as the western world began its transformation from an agrarian to an industrial society.

Despite the enormous differences between then and now, the economic problems with which society struggles remain the same:

How do we decide what to produce with our limited resources?

How do we ensure stable prices and full employment of our resources?

How do we provide a rising standard of living both for ourselves and for future generations?

Progress in economic thought toward answers to these questions tends to take discrete steps rather than to evolve smoothly over time.

A new school of ideas suddenly emerges as changes in the economy yield fresh insights and make existing doctrines obsolete. The new school eventually becomes the consensus view, to be pushed aside by the next wave of new ideas.

This process continues today and its motivating force remains the same as that three centuries ago: to understand the economy so that we may use it wisely to achieve society’s goals.

Mercantilists

Mercantilism was the economic philosophy adopted by merchants and statesmen during the 16th and 17th centuries. Mercantilists believed that a nation’s wealth came primarily from the accumulation of gold and silver.

Nations without mines could obtain gold and silver only by selling more goods than they bought from abroad. Accordingly, the leaders of those nations intervened extensively in the market, imposing tariffs on foreign goods to restrict import trade, and granting subsidies to improve export prospects for domestic goods. Mercantilism represented the elevation of commercial interests to the level of national policy.

Physiocrats

Physiocrats, a group of 18th century French philosophers, developed the idea of the economy as a circular flow of income and output. They opposed the Mercantilist policy of promoting trade at the expense of agriculture because they believed that agriculture was the sole source of wealth in an economy.

As a reaction against the Mercantilists’ copious trade regulations, the Physiocrats advocated a policy of laissez-faire, which called for minimal government interference in the economy.

Classical School

The Classical School of economic theory began with the publication in 1776 of Adam Smith’s monumental work, The Wealth of Nations.

The book identified land, labor, and capital as the three factors of production and the major contributors to a nation’s wealth. In Smith’s view, the ideal economy is a self-regulating market system that automatically satisfies the economic needs of the populace.

He described the market mechanism as an “invisible hand” that leads all individuals, in pursuit of their own self-interests, to produce the greatest benefit for society as a whole. Smith incorporated some of the Physiocrats’ ideas, including laissez-faire, into his own economic theories, but rejected the idea that only agriculture was productive.

While Adam Smith emphasized the production of income, David Ricardo focused on the distribution of income among landowners, workers, and capitalists. Ricardo saw a conflict between landowners on the one hand and labor and capital on the other. He posited that the growth of population and capital, pressing against a fixed supply of land, pushes up rents and holds down wages and profits.

Thomas Robert Malthus used the idea of diminishing returns to explain low living standards. Population, he argued, tended to increase geometrically, outstripping the production of food, which increased arithmetically. The force of a rapidly growing population against a limited amount of land meant diminishing returns to labor. The result, he claimed, was chronically low wages, which prevented the standard of living for most of the population from rising above the subsistence level.

Malthus also questioned the automatic tendency of a market economy to produce full employment. He blamed unemployment upon the economy’s tendency to limit its spending by saving too much, a theme that lay forgotten until John Maynard Keynes revived it in the 1930s.

Coming at the end of the Classical tradition, John Stuart Mill parted company with the earlier classical economists on the inevitability of the distribution of income produced by the market system. Mill pointed to a distinct difference between the market’s two roles: allocation of resources and distribution of income. The market might be efficient in allocating resources but not in distributing income, he wrote, making it necessary for society to intervene.

Marginalist School

Classical economists theorized that prices are determined by the costs of production. Marginalist economists emphasized that prices also depend upon the level of demand, which in turn depends upon the amount of consumer satisfaction provided by individual goods and services.

Marginalists provided modern macroeconomics with the basic analytic tools of demand and supply, consumer utility, and a mathematical framework for using those tools. Marginalists also showed that in a free market economy, the factors of production — land, labor, and capital — receive returns equal to their contributions to production. This principle was sometimes used to justify the existing distribution of income: that people earned exactly what they or their property contributed to production.

Marxist School

The Marxist School challenged the foundations of Classical theory. Writing during the mid-19th century, Karl Marx saw capitalism as an evolutionary phase in economic development. He believed that capitalism would ultimately destroy itself and be succeeded by a world without private property.

An advocate of a labor theory of value, Marx believed that all production belongs to labor because workers produce all value within society. He believed that the market system allows capitalists, the owners of machinery and factories, to exploit workers by denying them a fair share of what they produce. Marx predicted that capitalism would produce growing misery for workers as competition for profit led capitalists to adopt labor-saving machinery, creating a “reserve army of the unemployed” who would eventually rise up and seize the means of production.

Institutionalist School

Institutionalist economists regard individual economic behavior as part of a larger social pattern influenced by current ways of living and modes of thought. They rejected the narrow Classical view that people are primarily motivated by economic self-interest. Opposing the laissez-faire attitude towards government’s role in the economy, the Institutionalists called for government controls and social reform to bring about a more equal distribution of income.

Keynesian School

Reacting to the severity of the worldwide depression, John Maynard Keynes in 1936 broke from the Classical tradition with the publication of the General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. The Classical view assumed that in a recession, wages and prices would decline to restore full employment. Keynes held that the opposite was true. Falling prices and wages, by depressing people’s incomes, would prevent a revival of spending. He insisted that direct government intervention was necessary to increase total spending.

Keynes’ arguments proved the modern rationale for the use of government spending and taxing to stabilize the economy. Government would spend and decrease taxes when private spending was insufficient and threatened a recession; it would reduce spending and increase taxes when private spending was too great and threatened inflation. His analytic framework, focusing on the factors that determine total spending, remains the core of modern macroeconomic analysis.

Summary

Economic theories are constantly changing. Keynesian theory, with its emphasis on activist government policies to promote high employment, dominated economic policymaking in the early post-war period. But, starting in the late 1960s, troubling inflation and lagging productivity prodded economists to look for new solutions. From this search, new theories emerged:

Monetarism updates the Quantity Theory, the basis for macroeconomic analysis before Keynes. It reemphasizes the critical role of monetary growth in determining inflation.

Rational Expectations Theory provides a contemporary rationale for the pre-Keynesian tradition of limited government involvement in the economy. It argues that the market’s ability to anticipate government policy actions limits their effectiveness.

Supply-side Economics recalls the Classical School’s concern with economic growth as a fundamental prerequisite for improving society’s material well-being. It emphasizes the need for incentives to save and invest if the nation’s economy is to grow.

These theories and others will be debated and tested. Some will be accepted, some modified, and others rejected as we search to answer these basic economic questions: How do we decide what to produce with our limited resources? How do we ensure stable prices and full employment of resources? How do we provide a rising standard of living both for now and the future?

Shayne Heffernan

Shayne Heffernan oversees the management of funds for institutions and high net worth individuals.

Shayne Heffernan holds a Ph.D. in Economics and brings with him over 25 years of trading experience in Asia and hands on experience in Venture Capital, he has been involved in several start ups that have seen market capitalization over $500m and 1 that reach a peak market cap of $15b. He has managed and overseen start ups in Mining, Shipping, Technology and Financial Services. www.livetradingnews.com

Brokerage, Investment Management, Investment Banking, Emerging
Managed Trading Account with Integrity and Stability

THE BEST OVERALL MANAGED ACCOUNT SOLUTION, FIND OUT WHY, CONTACT US TODAY

For More Information Contact

Linda Johnson,
Business Development Director – Private Client Group,
Heffernan Capital Management
Sales@Heffcap.com

Singapore

3 Raffles Place #07-01
Bharat Building Singapore 048617
Tel: +65 6329 6408
Fax: +65 6329 9699
Email : info@heffcap.com

Bangkok

Suite 53 Athenee Tower
63 Wireless Road,
Lumpini, Pathumwan,
Bangkok 10330 THAILAND
Email : info@heffcap.com

New York

347 5th Avenue, Suite 1402-508 NY, NY 10016

Email : info@heffcap.com


Get the Updates Daily

Enter your email address:
Delivered by FeedBurner

Your use of any of the Websites or any of the Services (defined below) constitutes your agreement to be bound by and comply with the Website Terms and Conditions and your consent to the collection, use and disclosure of personal information as described in the Privacy Policy. If you do not so agree and consent, you are not authorized to visit or use our Websites or the Services.

Be extremely careful, investing in securities carries a high degree of risk; you may likely lose some or all of the investment. You must also accept that opinions on stock markets change minute to minute, opinions expressed my change at any time without warning. Opinions maybe influenced by ad sales and other financial consideration. This site does not offer any assistance in making financial decisions.

Read the Terms of Service

Posted by on Jan 26th, 2012and filed underLatest News, Shayne Heffernan, USA.You can follow any responses to this entry through theRSS 2.0Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

market news

The Best Managed Equity Portfolio
The Best Managed Equity Portfolio

Working with some of the World’s largest financial institutions HCM’s goal is to provide portfolio returns that exceed the S&P 500 Index benchmark while providing lower volatility of …

Free International Financial & Investing Newsfeed
Free International Financial & Investing Newsfeed

Live Trading News delivers free web content to your web site with our free rss newsfeeds. Have fresh news articles automatically appear on your site throughout the …

ASEAN News: Christopher Harriman on The Philippines
ASEAN News: Christopher Harriman on The Philippines

ASEAN as an Investment Destination with Global Strategist Christopher Harriman

Philippines:

With an estimated population of about 94 million people, the Philippines is the world’s 12th most …

The Hot List

Commodity Boom to Lift American Estates Management Company PINK:AEMC
Commodity Boom to Lift American Estates Management Company PINK:AEMC

American Estates Management Company PINK:AEMC is a firm that specializes in the purchase and sale of royalties and mineral rights from estates and individuals. AEMC buy royalty …

shoutbox

How are you investing and why?


140 characters left  

Guest: Samsung Electronics Co. (KS:005930),(PK:SSNLF)

Mon, 02/20/12 | 0 Comment

5         

0   

Guest: Internet volume and sales will double if they make online wagering legal. People will be more adjust to making online currency transactions.

Mon, 02/20/12 | 0 Comment

0         

0   

poll

Should the USA Act on Iran

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Subscribe to Live Trading News

NEW YORK           LONDON           BARCELONA           TOKYO           SYDNEY

back to top
    Add to RSS

© 2011 Live Trading News | Privacy | Terms of Service | RSS | Help | Contact Us | Work for Us | About Us