And once the infrastructure that is being constructed comes online, the result is an increase harvest of domestic energy supplies and reduced energy consumption, which is an increase in aggregate supply that is the only serious prospect for countering massive cost-push price inflation from imported energy over the next two decades.
Where is the inflationary impact?
Government spending creates fiat currency, as always, and that fiat currency is used to mobilize currently unemployed resources, which is not an inflationary use of newly created purchasing power, and the portion that is recirculated and used to finance consumption spending also mobilized unemployed resources, which is not an inflationary re-used of that newly created purchasing power.
Certainly any effort to get the same effect primarily through monetary policy might be inflationary, but then that would be because of the extreme ineffectiveness of monetary policy in the face of a strong recession, especially when it is a global recession so that neo-mercantalist exchange rate policy is unlikely to lead to any substantial growth in export demand.
As far as "create capital" ... it is hard to tell in reading this whether the "capital" is finance capital (claims on incomes flowing through going concerns) ... real economic capital (goods and services that expand the productive capacity of the economy) ... or a Three-Card-Monte conflation of the two. I've been accused of being a Marxist, yet while Harpo's my favourite, it's Groucho I'm always quoting. Odd, that.
This deficit must be financed.
You mean the trade deficit impact of the spending? Well, yes, but in the middle of a global economic downturn is the time when it will be least difficult to finance that ... and it only needs to be finance, since it is self-funding, given that the eventual savings on the trade account will more than offset the original trade-account impact of the government spending on infrastructure.
On 5:
5. The amount of money printed is not going to be matched by an equivalent amount of goods.
Why not? I would argue the exact contrary: under strong recessionary conditions, the amount of money printed will of course be matched by something quite close to that amount of newly produced goods and services.
It is a major government spending program on infrastructure when the economy is booming, or at least well advanced in a normal recovery that the spending will not be matched by that amount of newly produced goods, but instead will in part shoulder aside existing production, which is an inflationary process.
You seem to be assuming that when faced with the orders from the government, suppliers will turn their backs on orders from other customers, rather than increasing production to meet the new orders without turning away existing customers. Which in a deep and global recession is presumption that I find to be absurd. I've been accused of being a Marxist, yet while Harpo's my favourite, it's Groucho I'm always quoting. Odd, that.
It's indirect wealth - it doesn't live in warehouses, and people can't buy it directly.
But if breeds wealth in the same way that lack of infrastructure - including lack of banking infrastructure - destroys it.
If you're losing spending power, it doesn't matter if you're losing it to inflation or because items are piling up in the docks because no one can offer a credit line for it.
There's also the subtext that 'inflation' is often really just code for 'worker power.' But that's for another diary.