eskimospy, you are absolutely obsessed with the subject, don't let your obsession and your need to be superior to the rest of ATP&N cloud your judgment. Like I stated a long time ago in this thread, your original link includes as a major point an exclusion of some data during the 1940's. Seriously, no one gives a flying fuck about how the debt, spending, and economic growth levels of that time period relate to today because they don't. It's a vastly different world today than then.
Well you better tell the Reinhart and Rogoff that, as such data comprises a large portion of their data set. In fact even in their later studies if you remove the Axis powers recovering from war their regression coefficient basically disappears.
I will just throw out scenarios I believe is entirely plausible, see what you have to say:
A country has within it emerging businesses, emerging manufacturing, products and services that are new and in demand across the globe. The government, although in high debt, sees the potential and increases spending to help the businesses within the country grow. Investors, lenders, also see the growth potential of the private businesses and are more willing to lend money to fund the government's increased spending.
Or, a country is loaded with debt, it's manufacturing base is out-dated, infrastructure out-dated, there are no new technologies, or innovative products/services of large scale to promote out to the world. Investors and lenders see higher risk and are more weary of lending money to the country's government.
I don't really see what you're trying to prove.
It is entirely reasonable to be able to find examples of situations matching increased spending with increased growth, along with examples of decreased spending with decreased growth. You want to claim that the growth is a product of the spending levels. I would say that growth and spending levels are linked together, but not driven primarily by the spending levels, both being driven by other situations taking place within the country.
Nowhere have I ever claimed that growth is a product of government spending levels. I have claimed that austerity in a deeply depressed economy is counterproductive and foolish. This is quite well supported by both the literature and by recent real-world experience.
There are so many factors that go into whether a country grows economically or suffers. You found some computations that feed your ego, yet no where do they indicate they are relevant to the current situation this country is currently facing. I mean, fuck, your linked articles seem to take for granted an assumption that economic growth happens just because it is supposed to naturally happen. Growth largely happens when there is a breakthrough in technology, or a major shift in the way people in the world live/work/communicate/travel/etc., something kind of unpredictable and cannot be dictated by government spending levels.
Yes there are many factors into whether a country grows or not. That's what regression models are for. I have literally zero idea how you came to the idea that government spending would be all that mattered, as that has never been argued by anyone ever. What we DO know is that government spending levels influence growth, which is of course the whole point.
I like how pointing out that a ruinous economic policy that is causing significant suffering to millions is poorly supported by the evidence is feeding my ego. This is a real problem that affects you... as in your life today, as we're all in this together. Amazing how people get so worked up over a kid shot in Florida but casually dismiss something that is taking money out of their pockets with a 'I guess there's no way to know!'.