Fiscal Policy and Economic Stabilization In the 1930s, with the United States reeling from the Great Depression,
the government began to use fiscal policy not just to support itself or pursue social policies but to promote
overall economic growth and stability as well. Policy-makers were influenced by John Maynard Keynes, an English
economist who argued in The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936) that the rampant joblessness of his time resulted from inadequate demand for goods
and services. According to Keynes, people did not have enough income to buy everything the economy could
produce, so prices fell and companies lost money or went bankrupt. Without government intervention, Keynes
said, this could become a vicious cycle. As more companies went bankrupt, he argued, more people would lose
their jobs, making income fall further and leading yet more companies to fail in a frightening downward
spiral.
Keynes argued that government could halt the decline by increasing spending on its own or by cutting taxes.
Either way, incomes would rise, people would spend 89
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