Production and Consumption
If an individual in a market economy wants to secure consumer goods and services he wants, he must produce something useful that can be exchanged for those goods and services. In a market economy, every individual must be a producer first before he can exercise demand. Producers ultimately pay with goods and services in order to exchange them for other previously produced goods and services they want. This is true even if they exchange money for goods since the money simply acts as a medium of exchange. It is an increase in the production of goods and services that sets in motion an increase in the demand. David Ricardo wrote:“No man produces, but with a view to consume or sell, and he never sells but with an intention to purchase some other commodity, which may be immediately useful to him, or which may contribute to future production. By producing, then, he necessarily becomes either the consumer of his own goods, or the purchaser and consumer of the goods of some other person.”
“Let us assume that in some country production must be completely rebuilt. The only factors of production available to the population besides laborers are those factors of production provided by nature. Now, if production is to be carried out by a roundabout method, let us assume of one year’s duration, then it is self-evident that production can only begin if, in addition to these originary factors of production, a subsistence fund is available to the population which will secure their nourishment and any other needs for a period of one year. ... The greater this fund, the longer is the roundabout factor of production that can be undertaken, and the greater the output will be.
“It is clear that under these conditions the ‘correct’ length of the roundabout method of production is determined by the size of the subsistence fund or the period of time for which this fund suffices.”
Stock Market and Economic Growth
When commentators suggest that a particular factor is an important driving force in economic growth, we have to look at the relationship to saving. Does this factor strengthen or inhibit saving and capital investment? Following this reasoning, does a rising stock market encourage saving and capital investment?Again, according to much popular thinking, growth in the stock market makes people more optimistic about the future. This, in turn, it is alleged, boosts their demand for goods and services, thereby strengthening economic growth. On the other hand, it is not a psychological disposition that determines whether an individual’s demand can be exercised, but the increase in the production of goods. This, however, requires an increase in saving, all other things being equal. An improved psychology as such can do very little to lift the economy if savings, production, and capital investment are not expanding.
Central Bank Policies Cause Investors to Commit Erroneous Decisions
In the framework of the expanding “subsistence fund” and the market-selected money, such as gold, and in the absence of the central bank, the stock prices are likely to follow a generally rising trend. The increase in the stock market would reflect genuine economic growth—moving up and down relative to the success or failure of firms represented in the exchange. Economic growth is not because of increases in the stock market, but because of saving, capital investment, and greater production. The success of these things can be seen, in part, in an increase in the stock market. But this is assuming sound money, unhampered economic calculation, and no central bank.It is the central bank’s policies of tampering with the financial markets that causes boom-bust cycles. This is also key for bull and bear markets. As a result of the central bank policies, investors’ ability to distinguish wealth-generating activities from non-wealth-generating activities (i.e., bubble activities) is curtailed. By not being able to identify wealth-generators, investors become gamblers with the stock market—seen as a large casino.







