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And what you described is classic Keynesianism, isn't it? Stimulus during bad times, pay off the debt during good times...the Goldilocks economy. Neither too hot nor too cold, neither too bad nor too good.
Well yes.
Keynesianism makes sense.
It's historically correct, it's part of what Made Germany grow so greatly so quickly. They built Social Infrastructure, energy and its conduits as well as railroads when the ingredients were extremely cheap: i.e. labor, property values and material costs. And in the process they spurred consumer growth while decreasing business costs.
How is that in any way complicated?