In 1829 the then-young economist John Stuart Mill put his finger on how it was that there could be excess supply of everything in the economy – of pretty much all currently produced goods and services and all kinds of workers. Previous economists had asserted a “metaphysical necessity” that excess supply of one commodity be matched by excess demand for another: that if there were unemployed cobblers then there were desperate consumers frantically looking for more seamstresses, and thus the economy's problems were never those of a general shortage of demand but of structural adjustment. These thinkers, Mill was the first to point out, had forgotten about the financial sector. If there was an excess demand for financial assets, then there could be an excess supply of everything else – what we call a depression.
1829年,當(dāng)時(shí)還很年輕的經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)家約翰?斯圖亞特?穆勒(John Stuart Mill)指出了經(jīng)濟(jì)中過(guò)度供應(yīng)(包括目前生產(chǎn)的所有商品和服務(wù)以及各種類型的工人)是怎么一回事。以前的經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)家主張一種“形而上的必然性”,即如果一種商品過(guò)度供應(yīng),就必然存在對(duì)另一種商品的過(guò)度需求:如果有鞋匠失業(yè),那么就會(huì)有顧客迫切需要更多的女裁縫,因此經(jīng)濟(jì)的問(wèn)題從來(lái)不是需求普遍短缺的問(wèn)題,而是結(jié)構(gòu)性調(diào)整問(wèn)題。穆勒率先指出,這些學(xué)者沒(méi)有考慮金融業(yè)。如果對(duì)金融資產(chǎn)存在過(guò)度需求,那么就可能存在其它所有商品過(guò)度供應(yīng)的情形——我們稱之為蕭條。