That's not "supply side economics." What Steuss is describing has nothing to do with wages. Oversimplified, GDP -- the measure of increase in the United States wealth is the total value of goods and services created or performed during the year. So, take your profession as an optometrist. If you die, you stop performing the optometry services you've been providing. That's a reduction of GDP. Now suppose you're just fine, but all of your patients drop dead. That's a bunch of services you don't get to perform. That's also a reduction in GDP.ajax18 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 07, 2024 5:14 pmI'm not sure I buy into supply side economics to that extent. You have to account for the fact that dead people don't consume anything, not just that they don't produce anything. How many of us consume less than we earn?Every year that I'm alive, the US economy gets a year's worth of output from me, but more importantly it gets a year's worth of spending (which fuels other people's earnings)
You can do the same with goods. A company that makes widgets has all its workers drop dead. It will produce fewer widgets than it otherwise would have, which is a reduction of GDP. But also, if the company is fine but all its customers drop dead, it will cut back production and produce fewer widgets.
You're used to thinking of consumers who don't work as parasites. But, economically, they contribute to GDP by allowing producers of goods to make more goods for sale and providers of services to provide more services.
That's why you have to account for direct effects on producers and the indirect effect of loss customers on the same producers.
Now, assume that 20 million Americans suddenly drop dead. Not only do you have reduced GDP from the direct effects of the deaths for the loss of business owners and employees, the same businesses get hit a second time by the loss of customers. The economic loss to the US would be enormous.
That's Trump's deportation plan.