RS: Spending on British-made goods, I should say.
TC: Never mind that. The British public has something like £1,000 billion worth of spending vouchers at the moment — they call them bank deposits. And British companies have a further £250 billion of spending vouchers, and financial institutions also have another £400 billion or so of spending vouchers.
Ask yourself, "What is so special about adding another £20-30 billion in spending vouchers?" And if you think that these spending vouchers are so important, then why are you lukewarm about an increase in the quantity of money? Because spending vouchers and bank deposits seem to me to be the same thing.
RS: I don't think they are the same thing. It depends on who gets the spending voucher.
DJ: You would want people at the bottom of society to get them...
RS: ...whose propensity to save is very low, who may not have bank accounts or have very small bank accounts. You'll get a bigger bang per buck if you direct the new money to those people than if you direct it to people who have a lot to lose by their spending.
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