Not if government spending is stopping people from doing it.
Sure government spending can supplant private sector spending in any given area, all that means is that money can then be spent elsewhere. If government spending is supplanting all spending, then we are no longer a capitalist economy.
There is no escaping the fact that governments running a surplus is contractionary.
Increasing taxes isn't the only way to run a surplus. The government could also spend less.
This entire conversation comes about from my comment regards people posting ideas of ways the government can tax them more. However yes, the government could spend less, but it amounts to the same thing, running a surplus is contractionary, there is no escaping that.
You've neglected to mention that these aren't necessarily linear relationships, and that there are more factors than just economic growth = we can keep borrowing.
Obviously there's a lot going on in how an economy works, I think that can go without saying. But there is a very simple relationship between growth and the ability to service debt, and thus the ability to carry more debt.
Well just like with COVID-19 we should leave some wiggle room so we are at least somewhat prepared for the things we can't predict.
Yes, the old saving for a rainy day. Albeit a slightly different version of it.
Don't you find it interesting how throughout 2013 we were told by this government ( then in opposition ) of the impending debt and deficit disaster, it was a f**king emergency apparently. They were touting our debt trajectory at some six hundred billion dollars and how disastrous that would be.
Roll forward six years, and hey presto, nothing's really changed. The actual debt has pretty much met their forecasts, 'cept the difference being it's been done under their watch and it's no longer a debt and deficit disaster, it's responsible economic management.
Now as late as January this year, amid calls from all corners upon the government to stimulate the economy due to insipid growth, or indeed the increasing potential for an actual recession, Josh and Scotty were still peddling the line of protecting the surplus ( you know, the one we supposedly banked prior to the last election ) because we needed to save for a rainy day, and unless we paid down the debt we wouldn't have the money to protect the economy from future disaster.
Two months later Josh and Scotty are rolling out 330 billion dollars of spending, spending which from all accounts we couldn't do because we'd spent all our rainy day money.
Two months ago we were outta "wiggle room", yet now we have so much wiggle room that we can find enough to announce the biggest single spending package this country has ever seen by a f**king huge margin.
What gives there mate?
I mean really, anyone who looks at that and doesn't come to the conclusion that the debt and deficit disaster was / is nothing more than a boogey man manufactured for the purposes of political gain is simply not paying attention.