The Free Market Center
The Free Market Center
At a fundamental level, an economic system has a very few elements: production rate, consumption rate, and Savings level.
I have attempted, with this model, to demonstrate the interrelationships between these elements. Most important, I have tried to show the importance of relative rates of consumption. I have done this with three versions of the same model, which I describe in the next tab (above).
I have provided the following three versions of the same model. I will summarize those versions briefly below:
Taken together these models develop the relationship between production rates, consumption rates, and savings level over a long period of time. In general, they demonstrate that short-term changes in consumption rates in one direction lead to long-term changes in consumption rates in the opposite direction.
The Keynesian "savings dilemma" does not exist. A choice does, however, exist between having a little more now and having a lot more in the long-run.
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& James B. Berger. All rights reserved.
To contact Jim Berger, e-mail:
© 2010—2020 The Free Market Center & James B. Berger. All rights reserved.
To contact Jim Berger, e-mail: