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Preliminary steps toward a universal economic dynamics for monetary and fiscal policy

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Is a
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Academic paper
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Academic Paper attributes

arXiv ID
1710.062850
arXiv Classification
Physics
Physics
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Publication URL
arxiv.org/pdf/1710.0...85.pdf0
Publisher
ArXiv
ArXiv
0
DOI
doi.org/10.48550/ar...10.062850
Paid/Free
Free0
Academic Discipline
Physics
Physics
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Economics
Economics
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Finance
Finance
0
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Nonlinear physics
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Computer science
Computer science
0
‌
Quantitative finance
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Submission Date
October 17, 2017
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December 29, 2017
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Author Names
Jean Langlois-Meurinne0
Yaneer Bar-Yam0
Rodolfo Garcia0
Mari Kawakatsu0
Paper abstract

We consider the relationship between economic activity and intervention, including monetary and fiscal policy, using a universal dynamic framework. Central bank policies are designed for growth without excess inflation. However, unemployment, investment, consumption, and inflation are interlinked. Understanding dynamics is crucial to assessing the effects of policy, especially in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Here we lay out a program of research into monetary and economic dynamics and preliminary steps toward its execution. We use principles of response theory to derive implications for policy. We find that the current approach, which considers the overall money supply, is insufficient to regulate economic growth. While it can achieve some degree of control, optimizing growth also requires a fiscal policy balancing monetary injection between two dominant loop flows, the consumption and wages loop, and investment and returns loop. The balance arises from a composite of government tax, entitlement, subsidy policies, corporate policies, as well as monetary policy. We show empirically that a transition occurred in 1980 between two regimes--an oversupply to the consumption and wages loop, to an oversupply of the investment and returns loop. The imbalance is manifest in savings and borrowing by consumers and investors, and in inflation. The latter increased until 1980, and decreased subsequently, resulting in a zero rate largely unrelated to the financial crisis. Three recessions and the financial crisis are part of this dynamic. Optimizing growth now requires shifting the balance. Our analysis supports advocates of greater income and / or government support for the poor who use a larger fraction of income for consumption. This promotes investment due to growth in demand. Otherwise, investment opportunities are limited, capital remains uninvested, and does not contribute to growth.

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