laughing dog
Contributor
That is not necessarily true. The deflationary experience of Japan is recent proof that your claim is not unilaterally true.Printing money raises prices.
That is not necessarily true. The deflationary experience of Japan is recent proof that your claim is not unilaterally true.Printing money raises prices.
Ludwig Von Mises
Ludwig Von Mises, the famous Austrian School economist described what he called a "crack-up" boom. We all know that when governments expand the money supply it creates inflation. This is not hotly debated among economists. There are limits to how much and how long governments can intervene to expand credit and money creation without suffering serious consequences. ...
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I think BB was asleep in 2008 when the global economy imploded and if weren't for substantial international Government involvement and cooperation, the global economy would still be in ashes.
But why blame monetary expansion by governments? An asset price bubble causes all the effect mentioned, including expansion, and is more likely to be caused by an increase in the spending power of the very rich, rather than an increase in money supply generally, since they're the ones, overwhelmingly, who buy the assets that are inflating. The main asset that's inflating is the housing market, it's doing so primarily at the top end, either from luxury houses or for rental units as an investment, and it's done so as a haven for excess cash at a time when bond and equity returns are modest, principally due to low interest rates.
So the solution seems easy - close the inequality gap, remove the excess cash which is being funnelled away from the real economy and into a series of asset bubbles, and use it to stimulate growth amongst the most active parts of the economy - small businesses and SMEs.
Ludwig Von Mises
stopped reading here
I believe he wrote that because he knows the effects of MIC and strong "Support our Troops" sentiment on sustaining whatever the government wants to print. EU probably won't be as successful for two reasons. First the members are not unified with common policy except currency and second they are a bunch of pacifist pusillanimous pussyfooters. Hell even Russia, with no economy at all, still maintains its ruble in measurable proportions to western currencies only because Europe and the US are not willing to confront them directly.The rich don't create money. They can't expand the total supply. What they spend on real estate cannot be spent somewhere else. That failure to spend would cause price declines elsewhere. Money is created when banks lend. Bank lending policies are primarily the result of governmental policies. It wasn't always that way. Governments used to stay out of it for the most part.
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Ludwig Von Mises
stopped reading here
A frank admission of close-mindedness.
Ludwig Von Mises, the famous Austrian School economist described what he called a "crack-up" boom. We all know that when governments expand the money supply it creates inflation. This is not hotly debated among economists. There are limits to how much and how long governments can intervene to expand credit and money creation without suffering serious consequences. ...
<snip>
You are a constant source of frustration to me. I have in the past tried to explain the sources of your confusion on these subjects. The evidence is all around you and it is obvious, but you chose to ignore it, presumably so that you can continue to embarrass yourself making posts like this one.
You are seemingly unphased by the numerous failed predictions of run away inflation that you and others have made since 2008 because the Fed is "pumping up the money supply" and that the dollar is going to collapse because of a loss in confidence because of the high government debt. The constant failure of any of these things doesn't seem to put the smallest dent in the unbelievable surety of the correctness of the economics that you used to arrive at such a record of repeated failure.
You claim to be not a libertarian and yet here you are quoting the libertarians' economists of choice, the Austrians. No one becomes a proponent of Austrian economics because of that school of economics success at describing the economy that we have today. As you insist on repeatedly proving they are complete failures at this. People become Austrians because they feel that the fantasy economy that the Austrians put forth is somehow a more desirable one than the real economy that has evolved over thousands of years of trial and error. This is in spite of the fact that they can't explain either how their fantasy economy would work, how it could come into existence or how it would be better than the economy that we already have. It is by any measure therefore inferior to the other 19th century, anarchist, fantasy economic theory, Marxism. And spoiler alert, Marxism was an utter disaster when adherents tried to implement it.
I can help you understand the economy that we have today, where it came from and why it is the way that it is. (Another spoiler alert, it is the way that it is because of the collective force of the choices freely made by the various economic actors, not because the evil government has imposed itself on the economy.) But I need some small indication that you see some of the many flaws in Austrian economics and that you are willing to face truths that will sink your highly developed preconceived biases. It should be obvious to you by now that the world doesn't work the way that you wish that it did. Are you willing to act on that?
I believe he wrote that because he knows the effects of MIC and strong "Support our Troops" sentiment on sustaining whatever the government wants to print. EU probably won't be as successful for two reasons. First the members are not unified with common policy except currency and second they are a bunch of pacifist pusillanimous pussyfooters. Hell even Russia, with no economy at all, still maintains its ruble in measurable proportions to western currencies only because Europe and the US are not willing to confront them directly.The rich don't create money. They can't expand the total supply. What they spend on real estate cannot be spent somewhere else. That failure to spend would cause price declines elsewhere. Money is created when banks lend. Bank lending policies are primarily the result of governmental policies. It wasn't always that way. Governments used to stay out of it for the most part.
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Ludwig Von Mises
stopped reading here
A frank admission of close-mindedness.
I hate that we spend a measurable proportion of our federal budget on defense except when I can make claims like the above that hold.
Claim over. I hate that we spend so much money supporting a ridiculous, democracy destroying, MIC.
I think BB was asleep in 2008 when the global economy imploded and if weren't for substantial international Government involvement and cooperation, the global economy would still be in ashes.
Wrong, wrong, wrong. If the government hadn't intervened, a few Wall Street Banks would have gone under and maybe a few foreign banks as well. It would have been bad for a while, but the whole thing would be over by now, and we would have solvent banks in Wall Street and in Europe. As it the banks are in worse shape than ever and even deeper in debt. So are the European banks. We refused to clean house when it was a relatively small task. Now we're faced a far more serious global meltdown. And for what? A "recovery" that wasn't even a real recovery but a mere hiccup boom.
I would love to hear your response to this myself SimpleDon. What say you SimpleDon?You make your point and then you quit the field. Then you want to act as if you initial point was the final point made. It rarely is. But you simply ignore my responses.
There are only 2 solutions I can think of. And neither has anything to do with Austrian economics:The dollar WILL collapse because of a loss of confidence in due to our unpayable debt, but who can ever predict the timing on something like this? Still, it's clear that these policies cannot continue. We are running deficits of 1 to 2 trillion dollars a year and as the baby boomers continue to retire, it will soon exceed two trillion every year. How long can we sustain that with a $14 trillion GDP? GDP growth isn't coming anywhere near the increase in expenditures. Do the math. At two percent growth, which is typical over the long term for a highly developed economy such as ours, our three trillion dollars in revenue could be expected to grow by about $60 billion per year. That won't begin to cover expenditure growth even if Congress keeps discretionary spending at zero. Indeed, at two percent interest rates for the 10-year Treasury, the increased interest costs of a two trillion deficit would cost $20 billion alone. But there's no way that interest rates are going to stay that low forever. A normal interest rate on the 10-year is about 6%. So when interest rates go up, it's game over.
This isn't "Austrian economics." This is arithmetic. So show me how we get out of this mess?
You assume that boneyard bill's premises (that the dollar will collapse and that our debts will be unpayable) are true. But they are not.Rvonse said:There are only 2 solutions I can think of. And neither has anything to do with Austrian economics:
1. Some kind of robot technology that causes productivity to rise exponentially
or
2. Some kind of mass killing such as war or plague of a huge amount of people. Especially killing off the old ones like myself.
But I think I like option 1 a lot better than option 2.
But how can interest ever be raised again? If they were to raise interest today it looks like the results would be terrible. How would an optimist like yourself see things playing out so that interest could be raised again?You assume that boneyard bill's premises (that the dollar will collapse and that our debts will be unpayable) are true. But they are not.Rvonse said:There are only 2 solutions I can think of. And neither has anything to do with Austrian economics:
1. Some kind of robot technology that causes productivity to rise exponentially
or
2. Some kind of mass killing such as war or plague of a huge amount of people. Especially killing off the old ones like myself.
But I think I like option 1 a lot better than option 2.
There is no indication that the US dollar will collapse. Boneyard bill has been predicting this for years and we still are not observably closer to such an outcome.
Nor is the reason to believe that our debts are "unpayable" or that dealing with them will cause such an economic calamity. There is no indication that our economy will not continue to grow (albeit a slower rate) or that we will begin to deal with our finances in a more rational fashion. His forecasts are predicted on assuming utter stupidity and extremely low probability worst case scenarios.
The effects of increases in interest rates depends on the size and speed of the increase, along with other economic conditions. If the economy continues to chug along, interest rates might be able to slowly creep up without causing much economic damage.But how can interest ever be raised again? If they were to raise interest today it looks like the results would be terrible. How would an optimist like yourself see things playing out so that interest could be raised again?You assume that boneyard bill's premises (that the dollar will collapse and that our debts will be unpayable) are true. But they are not.
There is no indication that the US dollar will collapse. Boneyard bill has been predicting this for years and we still are not observably closer to such an outcome.
Nor is the reason to believe that our debts are "unpayable" or that dealing with them will cause such an economic calamity. There is no indication that our economy will not continue to grow (albeit a slower rate) or that we will begin to deal with our finances in a more rational fashion. His forecasts are predicted on assuming utter stupidity and extremely low probability worst case scenarios.
The world economy is changing. There are plenty of decent and well-paying jobs in different industries. US society does need to adjust its expectations about life styles, gov't support and taxation with the changing demographics.How can the US manage without the manufacturing jobs it gave to China? It certainly appears the service jobs left behind are so low in pay there is little tax base to support an aging population.
People and societies adapt to a changing environment (weather or economic). BB's entire analysis hinges on complete rigidity on the part of all actors in the face of changing economic conditions - something we have never witnessed. That doesn't mean the future will be bright and wonderful, but I seriously doubt it will be the catastrophe he has been predicting for the many past years here.Don't get me wrong, I live in the US and I hope you are right and Boneyard is wrong. But I am having trouble seeing your perspective on this.
The gold price has been insanely high for decades. The only thing propping it up is that everyone in the market knows that everyone else in the market is batshit insane.
Gold is useful in small quantities for jewelery, dental prostheses, optical coatings, some electronic components, and decoration (gold leaf). None of these uses could possibly ever soak up the amount of refined gold currently stored in vaults worldwide; that gold is valuable for no reason other than that people have decided to value it. It will never, ever, be used for any purpose; it will sit in vaults until people realise it is inherently valueless, and then it will presumably be stacked up somewhere where people who want some can help themselves.
Of course, that doesn't mean you can get rich by shorting gold; The market can remain irrational for far longer than you can remain solvent.
Printing money raises prices. That includes the price of gold.
Printing money raises prices. That includes the price of gold.
No shit, Sherlock.
That doesn't change the fact that the massive oversupply of refined gold in the world today, that cannot conceivably be used in thousands of years, should (if markets were sane) render that particular commodity almost valueless. That it is not selling for pennies a tonne is purely an artefact of human cognitive impairment - literally, insanity.
Sure, if there is inflation, the price of all commodities - including those that are practically valueless - should, all else being equal, rise; but any number multiplied by almost nothing is almost nothing.
If the world had thousands of years supply of refined steel ingots in storage, doing nothing, what do you think that would do to the price of steel, iron, and iron ore? For sure, nobody would be interested in mining more iron ore. But gold mines worldwide are producing over 3,000 tonnes of the stuff each year - to be refined, cast into ingots, and placed into storage, along with the other over 180,000 tonnes that is already there. The owners of the stuff never even go to look at it. That's fucking insane.
No shit, Sherlock.
That doesn't change the fact that the massive oversupply of refined gold in the world today, that cannot conceivably be used in thousands of years, should (if markets were sane) render that particular commodity almost valueless. That it is not selling for pennies a tonne is purely an artefact of human cognitive impairment - literally, insanity.
Sure, if there is inflation, the price of all commodities - including those that are practically valueless - should, all else being equal, rise; but any number multiplied by almost nothing is almost nothing.
If the world had thousands of years supply of refined steel ingots in storage, doing nothing, what do you think that would do to the price of steel, iron, and iron ore? For sure, nobody would be interested in mining more iron ore. But gold mines worldwide are producing over 3,000 tonnes of the stuff each year - to be refined, cast into ingots, and placed into storage, along with the other over 180,000 tonnes that is already there. The owners of the stuff never even go to look at it. That's fucking insane.
If it's insane, why are they doing it? China is mining gold at a loss and refusing to sell any of it. Meanwhile, they're buying all the gold they can get their hands on. Russia is also buying gold and so is India.
You left out one important function for gold. It is very useful as a medium of exchange. We have paper dollars! You might exclaim. But paper dollars are very cheap to produce and accounting entries (which is most of what our money is) are even cheaper.
Consider this, when we were on a gold standard, the gold actually served an immediate, practical purpose. It served as a medium of exchange. Even though it mostly never left the vaults, it served as security for the bank notes that people actually used in their transactions.
Fiat money has no security. Consequently people seeking security will turn to gold and silver in direct proportion to their lack of confidence in the prevailing fiat currencies. The high price of gold is a symptom of the declining confidence in the major fiat currencies of world and of the dollar in particular.
And by the way, if you think the price of gold on the COMEX is ridiculously high, keep in mind that you can't actually buy gold at that price. The COMEX price is the price for gold contracts not real, physical gold. Real, physical gold is selling at a 30-50% premium over the COMEX price.
Because it works as long as everyone else is equally crazy.So what? Lots of people do insane things.China is mining gold at a loss and refusing to sell any of it. Meanwhile, they're buying all the gold they can get their hands on. Russia is also buying gold and so is India.No it isn't.You left out one important function for gold. It is very useful as a medium of exchange.Exactly. Cheaper things are good. Expensive things cost more. If you have two ways to do something, the non-insane option is to go with the cheaper.We have paper dollars! You might exclaim. But paper dollars are very cheap to produce and accounting entries (which is most of what our money is) are even cheaper.Indeed it did. And in the neolithic, good quality flints were hugely prized, for good reasons. But we are no longer in the neolithic, nor are we on the gold standard.Consider this, when we were on a gold standard, the gold actually served an immediate, practical purpose.And instability, deflationary spirals, recessions and all kinds of needless economic harm resulted. Fortunately, we have moved on since then; fractional reserve banking allows money supply to automatically match to demand - when people want to borrow, money is created, instead of having to be diverted from other economic purposes; and when they pay back the loan, that money disappears again, instead of hanging around causing inflation.It served as a medium of exchange. Even though it mostly never left the vaults, it served as security for the bank notes that people actually used in their transactions.
There is no way to match the supply of gold to the demand for money. That makes commodity money a truly bad idea.Nor does gold. Did you miss the part where I pointed out that there are 180,000 tonnes of refined gold sitting idle around the world? It is worthless as soon as people decide it is - just like fiat money.Fiat money has no security.But they don't - they turn to other fiat currencies. The Zimbabweans dropped their dollar for the greenback, not for golden krugerands. There is a reason for this.Consequently people seeking security will turn to gold and silver in direct proportion to their lack of confidence in the prevailing fiat currencies.It is a symptom of people's faith in each other's insanity.The high price of gold is a symptom of the declining confidence in the major fiat currencies of world and of the dollar in particular.
So what? More insanity.And by the way, if you think the price of gold on the COMEX is ridiculously high, keep in mind that you can't actually buy gold at that price. The COMEX price is the price for gold contracts not real, physical gold. Real, physical gold is selling at a 30-50% premium over the COMEX price.
The key difference between gold and fiat money is the fiat money is backed by real nation states, with real economies. Gold is backed by the crazy idea that it is valuable in and of itself, despite being practically useless and in massive oversupply.
I'm not going to respond to each individual point because I don't want to descend into a de-rail. I would only point out that fractional reserve lending was invented when a gold standard prevailed and is not incompatible with a gold standard. But I would also suggest that equating a medium of exchange with supply and demand is rather wrong-headed. You seem to have fallen into that modern neo-Keynesian trap of equating "demand" with money. That makes no sense. Money is a medium of exchange through with supply and demand are expressed.
Of course, if there is a shortage of money, prices will fall. It isn't the money balances the two. It is the price mechanism.
Meanwhile, you are left with the choice of believing that the entire world is insane or that you are wrong.
That is not necessarily true. The deflationary experience of Japan is recent proof that your claim is not unilaterally true.Printing money raises prices.
But why blame monetary expansion by governments? An asset price bubble causes all the effect mentioned, including expansion, and is more likely to be caused by an increase in the spending power of the very rich, rather than an increase in money supply generally, since they're the ones, overwhelmingly, who buy the assets that are inflating. The main asset that's inflating is the housing market, it's doing so primarily at the top end, either from luxury houses or for rental units as an investment, and it's done so as a haven for excess cash at a time when bond and equity returns are modest, principally due to low interest rates.
So the solution seems easy - close the inequality gap, remove the excess cash which is being funnelled away from the real economy and into a series of asset bubbles, and use it to stimulate growth amongst the most active parts of the economy - small businesses and SMEs.