This last couple of years has kinda made me re-examine my general leaning towards fiscal conservatism.
I would note a rather important bit about GDP here, and a point that might give away my question to WC and Darrin in the other thread:
Here is the equation used to determine GDP:
The "G" term is big bad government spending.
If, as many are advocating, we cut the deficit right away to 3% of the federal budget, that means an instant hit to GDP.
I have never, therefore, bought into the idea that goverment spending should be so totally minimized so as to "encourage growth". Goverment is part of the economy. The money it pays out doesn't vanish. It gets re-circulated back into the economy as a whole. If you assume that government is inefficient, and individuals/companies are more efficient, then as soon as the money leaves the goverment in the form of paychecks and paid invoices to contractors, it goes right back to being productive again.
The argument that goverment spending is 100% bad/inefficient seems to be to be a bit disinegenuous. Private sector booms and busts says to me that the private sector can allocate capital just as inefficiently as the most wasteful government program.
I am left to conclude that:
1) Goverment taxation is not quite the drag on the economy that some claim it is.
and
2) It is all a matter of allocating capital/effort in ways that maximize growth, and I don't think goverment spending is, comparatively, as bad/inefficient as some seem to think it is.
This is not to say I would ever advocate a controlled economy. That is a PROVEN failure.
I do believe that allowing people to take risks, and be rewarded for their efforts and ideas, is the most important thing we can do to reduce the overall level of human misery in the world.
I just don't buy the fanatical "all goverment is bad" schtick.