I think quantitative easing is an example (if I understood the post correctly, which I’m not sure about). By buying up bonds, the government is putting more dollars into the economy, which reduces the “amount of stuff produced per dollar”, thus creating scarcity (in other words, QE increases aggregate demand). To alleviate this pressure, people make more stuff in order to meet the excess demand (i.e. unemployment rates go down). Forcing the unemployment rate down is the same as “requiring almost everyone to do things”
I think quantitative easing is an example (if I understood the post correctly, which I’m not sure about). By buying up bonds, the government is putting more dollars into the economy, which reduces the “amount of stuff produced per dollar”, thus creating scarcity (in other words, QE increases aggregate demand). To alleviate this pressure, people make more stuff in order to meet the excess demand (i.e. unemployment rates go down). Forcing the unemployment rate down is the same as “requiring almost everyone to do things”