Investment in real inputs—structures and machinery used to boost future 
output and productivity—is one of the ways that an economy grows over 
time. In a capitalist economy, such investments are also crucial for 
macroeconomic stability and full employment because they provide an 
“injection” of demand to balance the “leakage” caused by personal and 
institutional savings. The Great Recession that began in 2007 was marked 
by a collapse of investment unprecedented since the Great Depression, as 
well as a dramatic drop in overall production and a sharp jump in 
unemployment. Since 2009, overall output has been growing again, but we 
have seen a much slower recovery of investment than after other 
recessions since 1947. The worst economic crisis since the 1930s, the 
Great Recession came after a long period of declining investment, and a 
break in the linkage between corporate profits and new investment.

full: http://www.dollarsandsense.org/archives/2013/0713friedman.html
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