Who? Republicans?
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Surely you jest!
It's probably more simple than that. Most of them are probably just getting rich off of this somehow or another.
Who? Republicans?
![]()
Surely you jest!
While I enjoy reading your posts, it sounds more like you're trying to find logical or semantical faults at this point, which dissapoints me as it doesn't feel very constructive.
You have people claiming that printing money doesn't matter.
It's probably more simple than that. Most of them are probably just getting rich off of this somehow or another.
I somewhat agree, but his argument rejecting repealing laws requiring bond sales in the amount of deficit spending was premised (for some reason) on his belief that the money supply is controlled by a government agency. It isn't, so he is going to have to come up with a different post hoc rationale to support what he has clearly been well conditioned to believe about how the economy works. I agree it doesn't really matter whether it is the Treasury or Fed that he thinks was doing it (and indeed, I think it useful to combine them for purposes of understanding the system), but I do think it behooves one coming into a thread and accusing another of espousing unempirical "crackpot" theories to at least try to get some very basic facts right along the way.
Someone on my facebook is posting that they're stopping Military retired paychecks come November 1st. Do you guys know anything about this?
It is not hard for me to "conscript" history or data, because it agrees with me. You have people claiming that printing money doesn't matter... we have centuries of history refuting that. You have people saying that the gold standard was less unstable than the current system... that is a laughable assertion that is easliy disproven (even when they use 0.1% inflation as a denominator to some ratio that doesn't matter). We can go over each instance if you would like clarification. EV for example, relies only on philosophical notions about money and sovereighnty of a nation... and no actual facts.
No actually i havent seen this and ive been following like a hawk. Unbelievable.
I somewhat agree, but his argument rejecting repealing laws requiring bond sales in the amount of deficit spending was premised (for some reason) on his belief that the money supply is controlled by a government agency. It isn't, so he is going to have to come up with a different post hoc rationale to support what he has clearly been well conditioned to believe about how the economy works. I agree it doesn't really matter whether it is the Treasury or Fed that he thinks was doing it (and indeed, I think it useful to combine them for purposes of understanding the system), but I do think it behooves one coming into a thread and accusing another of espousing unempirical "crackpot" theories to at least try to get some very basic facts right along the way.
Not for sure but I have heard November 1st as some big day for the shutdown and/or debt ceiling, so perhaps. Though what I heard was veterans benefits.. if that includes paychecks to military retired I do not know.
Yes and that includes military members who are medically retired as well if the debt limit isn't raised. With the federal government still shutdown, it affects VA benefits such as the GI Bill and the housing stipend that goes with it, VA disability, and a hold on all USDA mortgage loan applications and VA disability claims.
If the shutdown goes past Tuesday, the VA will not be able to make disability checks scheduled to go out the first of November.
That's just infuriating.
It is not hard for me to "conscript" history or data, because it agrees with me. You have people claiming that printing money doesn't matter... we have centuries of history refuting that. You have people saying that the gold standard was less unstable than the current system... that is a laughable assertion that is easliy disproven (even when they use 0.1% inflation as a denominator to some ratio that doesn't matter). We can go over each instance if you would like clarification. EV for example, relies only on philosophical notions about money and sovereighnty of a nation... and no actual facts.
What is the difference between "printed" money and money that is not "printed"? You must be able to answer this question.
The bottom line is that all money is printed, Sanky. Every dollar you own was printed. It is backed by nothing but the paper it is printed on. And, in many cases, not even that, because it doesn't even exist in paper form to begin with but as a mere number on a computer screen. Again, if "printed" money is anathema to you, I will happily accept all the "printed" money that you want to give me. I'm sure others will happily take all of your printed money as well.
There does not have to be a difference between printed to dollars, for you to understand that the value of that dollar versus anything tangible can change on a whim... there is nothing holding that value constant (no not every person or company in this world have to pay taxes) aside from when governments TRY to manipulate that value, ultimately failing to fight against market forces (over and over and over through history).
Be it paper, printed, electronic, imaginary... money is simply a medium of exchange between a buyer and a seller. Not only that, but people hold liquid assets (money) for contingencies, expecting for it store value. If investors think that US dollar won't hold value against, say, the Euro... they will either rather invest in Euro assets, or demand higher returns in the US to counteract the expected loss of value.
There are too many dynamics that MMT flatly ignores, because the theory is just a bunch of hypothetical bs. Sorry to be blunt, but there is no way around it at this point.
They are probably shorting the markets and losing money every time it doesn't tank.
sorry to be blunt, but you get your ass kicked every single time you attempt to enter an economics debate
Hehe yes, I understand PoliGAF is knee deep into the fantasy economics of MMT. It is still fun to argue.
No. All money is printed. Every dollar you own is printed. Are you arguing that because every dollar in your bank account is printed, the debt has been inflated away? If you are opposed to printed money, please cut me a check for whatever you have in your bank account. I'll happily accept all of your printed money.
You don't understand the monetary system.
sorry to be blunt, but you get your ass kicked every single time you attempt to enter an economics debate
Let's just cut to the chase, you want the Government to finance itself by issuing its own currency, rather than investors through securities (bonds).
Most of PoliGAF is not. EV is the only true devotee I'm aware of. But even folks like Black Mamba and Ghaleon, who are garden-variety Keynesians as far as I'm aware, have often argued with you in the past and made you look, well, kind of fanatical.
Actually no. I am saying the government already does finance itself by issuing its own currency. That is precisely what a fiat monetary system is. The money that exists now exists because the government declared it money by fiat, i.e., by "printing" it. If your position is that the government should be precluded from adding money into the system, then you are effectively just arguing in favor of severe deflation and economic ruin.
I am further saying that bond sales to investors currently do not fund anything. The practice is continued (1) because it is a legal relic of the gold-standard era when the government was required by the convertible nature of its currency to restrict new issuance (and hence borrow back its previously issued dollars); and (2) because it is in effect a subsidy to relative high income people (risk free interest). The gold-standard legal relics requiring that the government sell bonds in an amount that matches its deficit spending is what makes it appear to finance the spending. But it doesn't. In fact, the Treasury spends just by debiting and crediting bank accounts. It can do that with or without bond sales. And saying that does not mean that there will be runaway inflation. Nothing in fact has changed at all. The Treasury is still spending the same amount as Congress directed it to.
Consider that the reason the gold standard was abandoned was because of its instability and tendency to depress economic production. It had this tendency precisely because of its finite and limited character, which puts deflationary pressure on an economy over time. The reason for abandoning the gold standard was precisely to avoid this artificial limitation on the amount of net financial assets in the private sector and hence this artificial limitation on economic growth. Unfortunately, our governments (and much of the economics profession, sadly) are stuck in gold-standard type thinking, which needlessly continues to place the same deflationary pressures on the economy as the gold standard itself did (although thankfully not as severely for various reasons).
This is insane. How is this constitutional, at all?
Yeah unfortunately Black Mamba didn't respond in that last instance, where I highlighted that he himself does not understand Keynes... or the history of the world. I may sound fanatical because the idea that a lot of what we see today is the direct effect of a concentrarion of financial power in the 1800's, although 100% factual, is hard to imagine for those that stop reading after Intermediate macro.
Yeah unfortunately Black Mamba didn't respond in that last instance, where I highlighted that he himself does not understand Keynes... or the history of the world. I may sound fanatical because the idea that a lot of what we see today is the direct effect of a concentrarion of financial power in the 1800's, although 100% factual, is hard to imagine for those that stop reading after Intermediate macro.
I don't care about the gold standard. The mechanics of what you are advocating don't work. There isn't a reserve bank in the world that agrees with your ideas for exactly the reason I just described. Money issues are too inflationary to finance deficits, so they use bonds instead. You are doing economic ju jitsu to dodge simple questions about how this actually works.
I can't control whether or not you get gratification from being maverick-y, but it's not that hard to see when someone is simply cramming the world into a mold they've already decided it fits. That you accuse EV of the same while failing to recognize it in yourself is, I assure you, something that probably does not go unnoticed by most.
Obviously, central bankers in the world don't understand how money works... according to people like EV.
Indeed we are here to argue about our own molded views, but I have facts and history, and people like EV have hypotheticals. That is what it comes down to.
Yeah I read about this; it's just plain horrible. This was a premeditated shutdown through and through. I'm not even sure how a rule like this would be allowed to stand. It serves no purpose except for being obstructionist to the running of the government.
Yeah I read about this; it's just plain horrible. This was a premeditated shutdown through and through. I'm not even sure how a rule like this would be allowed to stand. It serves no purpose except for being obstructionist to the running of the government.
There really needs to be reforms in how the senate operates after all this is over. This shutdown doesn't help our country and shouldn't be allowed to continue just because a minority in the House aren't getting their way. That's not democracy.
I don't care about the gold standard. The mechanics of what you are advocating don't work. There isn't a reserve bank in the world that agrees with your ideas for exactly the reason I just described. Money issues are too inflationary to finance deficits, so they use bonds instead. You are doing economic ju jitsu to dodge simple questions about how this actually works.
If it follows that there is no difference between the Treasury selling a bond to the private sector and directly "borrowing" from the Fed, then it follows that there is no difference between the Treasury directly borrowing from the Fed and the Congress passing a law requiring the Fed simply to credit the Treasury's account for any spending in excess of tax revenues. These are all equivalent actions. The only difference is that when the law requires the Treasury to use the private sector as a middle man, interest gets paid out
Is the only hope for reversing this BS is when democrats have majority of the house?
What you haven't explained is how the bond is just as inflationary as cash, because that's what we are supposed to believe for your financing ideas to work.
Your understanding of inflation is... interesting.
You believe in supply-side economics, don't you?
Your understanding of inflation is... interesting.
You believe in supply-side economics, don't you?
In the bond scenario, an investor buys the bond, taking $100 out of the economy and putting it in the Governments pocket. The Government spends this, putting the $100 back into the economy - note the amount of cash in the economy hasn't changed. What has changed is that bond, but that bond isn't as liquid as cash, it can't be used to buy goods and services directly, hence it's less inflationary than cash.
Aren't you leaving out the payment of a return on the bond? Inflation.
Otherwise your're advocating for the Fed to borrow directly from the treasury.
Again, why are you making this so complicated. Let's keep it simple and forget about m1, m2, m3 and stick to the mechanics of Government debt. The US Government has a $100 deficit (brave new world of US budgets!). In the bond scenario, an investor buys the bond, taking $100 out of the economy and putting it in the Governments pocket. The Government spends this, putting the $100 back into the economy - note the amount of cash in the economy hasn't changed. What has changed is that bond, but that bond isn't as liquid as cash, it can't be used to buy goods and services directly, hence it's less inflationary than cash.
What you want to do is allow the Government to just spend the $100, after all the Government controls it's own currency. That $100 goes directly into the economy. What you haven't explained is how the bond is just as inflationary as cash, because that's what we are supposed to believe for your financing ideas to work.
If the government has already spent the $100 from the bond, and then has to pay out on the bond (plus interest), then it is, at that point, $200+ in debt. Money has been created. The only difference between this and simply printing money for the $100 is that selling bonds creates that money later while also putting some of it in the bank account of the bond holders. This tack makes sense when your money is tied to something finite, like gold, but if the currency is fiat, it doesn't really make sense that printing money now, rather later, is fundamentally more harmful, especially is that money is put toward increasing the quality of life and availability of resources, which will act to counterbalance the effects of whatever inflation might occur as a result of the money being printed.
Bingo. It's trading inflation now for later. What we can do when that bond expires is issue another bond, or run a surplus and finance it that way. Remember these bonds are very long. The goal here is to finance the Government whilst holding a steady inflation rate, and that's how it's achieved. And that's why every Government in the world does it this way and not through issuing money.
Of the last hundred posts in this thread, 57 are only and explicitly about modern monetary theory (or, I guess, about the personalities of the posters discussing modern monetary theory).
I reiterate my call for an MMT | OT. We can print as many posts as required to support it.
This is incorrect, because you are not accounting for all of the government operations. Consider that the government has a deficit of $100. The law requires that it borrow this $100 from the private sector by selling a bond. So the government exchanges a bond for $100. It has removed $100 from the private sector, and the Federal Reserve credits the Treasury's account for $100. The Treasury then turns around and immediately puts $100 back into circulation by spending $100. But these are not the only government operations ongoing. The Federal Reserve buys bonds held by the private sector. What does that look like? When the Federal Reserve buys a bond, it credits the owners bank account using keystrokes (what you call printing money). So the Treasury has re-spent the $100 it borrowed and then the Fed turns around and buys back the bond paying something more than $100 (to compensate the owner for the interest). There is, right now, more than $100 of additional money circulating. In short, the bond the Treasury sells is immediately worth more than $100. So it is adding more than $100 of net financial assets to the economy at the moment it sells the bond.
Now consider an example in which the law directs the Federal Reserve simply to credit the Treasurys account instead of requiring the Treasury to sell bonds to the private sector. The government has a deficit of $100. The Federal Reserve notices the deficit, and hits a keystroke giving the Treasury exactly $100. The Treasury spends $100. There is exactly, right now, $100 of additional money circulating and no more.
As you can see, the former is more inflationary than the latter. The reason is obvious. Selling bonds requires payment of interest, and when the Fed buys those bonds back (thus indirectly financing the government deficit in the words of Eccles), the Fed has to compensate for the bonds value that includes the interest due. An arrangement in which the Fed simply credits the Treasurys account does not require this, because there is no middle man who has to be paid off.
I agree reserve banks buy securities (well its a fact), but that has nothing to do with my example. My example was a Government financing a deficit - why would that hypothetical reserve need to buy its same bond back that year? The objective was to finance $100 for the yearly budget, which we did. You've palmed a card in for no good reason.
Whether the $100 is paid back that year or in the future, there is more than $100 in money created over time vs. $100 created now.
This seems very much like the debate re: food stamp debit cards vs. direct cash stimulus to poor families; that is, in trying to establish control, there may be inefficiencies created that we don't realize. Again, I'm not an MMT devotee, but I see and understand their points, though my main objection is I don't see government ever being efficient or honest enough to print ONLY as much money as is needed and to distribute said money in a non-corrupt way.