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Topic: Any reason why today's system will fail ? - page 2. (Read 2721 times)

hero member
Activity: 717
Merit: 501
October 17, 2013, 03:31:48 PM
#16
$10 trillion in printed money
$10 trillion in goods (wood, paper, clothing)

The fallacy is a printed dollar is the same as a worked dollar.
The a printed dollar only steals value from a worked dollar, since there is no work or goods behind a printed dollar.

X of $ = total goods
(Y of p$ + X of $) = total goods
since $p and $ are indistingushable, the are both $
(Y of $ + X of $) = total goods
(Y+X) of $ = total goods

This is a counterfeit policy.  If someone counterfeits a $100 and spends it in the economy what harm did it do?  According to you nothing as all the dollars remain the same price.  The reality is that value of the total supply of goods was weakened by $100.

Maybe each state (Alaska, California) should have their own currency?

The states with the gold currency will be most prosperous!!!  Although in the proper hands and slight inflation might be a good way to collect a tax without paperwork or without paying for irs agents


====

Now according to you you say what if people worked at the same wage for the printed dollars adding to the value of money?   The problem is

value of printed dollars > value of work for those dollars.



jr. member
Activity: 164
Merit: 1
October 17, 2013, 03:15:21 PM
#15
I'll sum some things up for those that don't like to read long posts:

There are 3 primary classes of "losers": 

1) Taxpayers - ultimately relied upon to generate the tax income to pay down debt.

2) Bond Holders - A decrease in dollar value hurts the value of US treasury bonds.

3) Consumers - Inflation is very slow and unsuspecting in nature, bond holders will be panicking long before we see significant inflation.  However the eventual price rising drains wealth indiscriminately from everyone.


We are currently on a miserable path that doesn't bode well for any of these groups, there will be a lot of losers.
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
October 17, 2013, 02:33:54 PM
#14
If the common person is getting more money into his bank account (higher paying job) then the expenses will get out of control immediately (you said so yourself). If the common person isn't getting more money into his bank account, then how was the economy stimulated?

1. Those money won't went into everybody's bank account over night, added money will enter the society through hiring jobless people to do government projects, those who already have the job are not affected

Suppose that the real jobless rate is 20%, even all of those people find a job, the real consumption won't increase immediately either, because they will first save a lot for security before they start to consume normally

2. Even the income of everybody doubled, they most likely won't spend much more on those items in CPI. They might buy a new car, a new house, a new boat, stocks or some bitcoins, but those are all not counted in CPI

3. Just like Kluge mentioned in the above post, added money supply also compete with added products/services. Maybe your income doubled, but if your output is also doubled, that will still keep everything at the same price, due to added products

IT product is a good example, although the productivity and quality of IT products increased magnitudes, the average price always stay the same over a decade


Maybe the only concern about such a system is fairness: People paid lots of effort to increase the wealth production, while Central bank just created equal amount of money without any effort and buy those added wealth from people. But that is because people want to sell their products for fiat money, it is their desire to get fiat money gave central banks chance to profit from the process

If you ask someone on the street: Why do you want fiat money as a payment medium? They will tell you that fiat money is accepted everywhere in the country and backed by government

So it seems today's system ultimately is supported by everybody himself, they are unconsciously but willingly contribute to this system


legendary
Activity: 1764
Merit: 1007
October 17, 2013, 11:49:58 AM
#13
TANSTAAFL, obviously. Someone's always gotta pay. With government spending, money printing etc it's our future generations. And the next and the next and the next. Gladly, we don't run out of future so easily, right? :·>

This is Krugman propaganda, government spending creating jobs is mostly a misallocation of resources. Some time, all infrastructure needed (or not) will have been built, all job-creation measures exhausted, and then? Guess what this Nobel prize winner proposes then? Right, an Alien invasion.
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
October 17, 2013, 11:26:03 AM
#12
Quote
People usually list the example of hyperinflation in Weimar Republic or Zimbabwe, but that was at a speed of magnitudes increase in money supply every month

If you study these cases carefully, another important reason that those money lose value quickly is because the government use those printed money to buy foreign currency on the forex exchange to pay back their foreign debt, thus created a direct impact of money's exchange value against all other foreign currencies
That just puts a tangible number to inflation. Inflation still exists, no matter what, when there's money printing, only its just not as quantifiable.

Quote
What you stated is a true fact, but to change that fact is not easy. There are so many human factors involved, for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_illusion There is a reason that the money printing trick works, since majority of social members only care about their own business, which is counted in dollar
They also care about their own expenses, which is also counted in dollar.

At the very least, it explains who "loses."

From individual person's point of view, it is very difficult to observe a relationship between money supply and inflation. For example, FED increased money supply by 400% since 2008, but there is no 4X increase in daily expenses for household. Because most of these money went into banks' pocket and then saved back at FED as a reserve, banks receive trillions of dollar in the process, but they will spend it very carefully to ensure there will be no inflation

If millions of people receive extra cash in their account, the inflation will be immediate. But if only selected a few receive huge amount of cash, they can just have a meeting and decide the appropriate action to not trigger inflation

Again, it is human nature. If majority of people won't notice the inflation, they don't care. Ironically, since banks become super rich during the printing money business, it just strengthened people's trust for banks

Ok, listen.

If the common person is getting more money into his bank account (higher paying job) then the expenses will get out of control immediately (you said so yourself). If the common person isn't getting more money into his bank account, then how was the economy stimulated?
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1015
October 17, 2013, 10:50:30 AM
#11
"Because people will work to create more wealth when they see more dollar, added dollar will create added wealth."
So if someone robs you on your way to work that'll make you work more productively that day?
Not that day, but depending on how desperate the situation is, you may get another job for a while. Inflation is slow and somewhat predictable. It's safe to assume you're going to lose a compounding 2-6% of your wealth per year if all your savings are USD stuffed under the mattress. You have strong incentive to fight that, because you could easily be losing more per year than you earn when close to retirement - so you invest (in a scenario where there is no inflation, maybe you would think it better to take the "sure thing" and just ignore investing altogether). There's also strong incentive to take out larger loans than usually considered reasonable, which means you'll have to work more hours to pay on.

US real GDP per capita per hour worked - the metric I think is pretty darn good at indicating fundamental ability to achieve a high quality of living - has been steadily increasing, even in and beyond 2008 - it's been like this for decades. The US is ultimately becoming increasingly economically efficient, even when our common sense is telling us stimulus funding subsidizes "bad" work. Maybe it is - maybe it's just the technological revolution and globalization which is pushing us forward. By this metric, the US is comparable to the "quality of living" increase in most European countries (even those with some form of crisis). We're way, way behind growth rates in places like Turkey (which I don't believe received or contributed to any type of bank bailout) and China, but our actual rates compared to Eastern countries are ~3x-5x higher, still.

One other metric worth looking at in relation to this question - in the US, mean hourly wage is right around $22. Meanwhile, by RealGDP/hoursworked/population, our "real" wage (after investments and everything else reported) is right around $40/hr, so the US is very reliant on investing (whether due to inflation or something else) to achieve a high standard of living, but it does seem to work (at least, so far). This is all gross oversimplification, though, and lots of assumptions. I don't think it can be confidently said one way or the other whether inflation is "good," though morality arguments are easy.
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
October 17, 2013, 10:39:49 AM
#10
"Because people will work to create more wealth when they see more dollar, added dollar will create added wealth."
So if someone robs you on your way to work that'll make you work more productively that day? This system will fail when people can no longer survive because the leech of government and banks sucks them dry... Which depends on how long the elite are smart enough to live within their means and keep their slaves alive.

Banks don't care about the slaves, they care about the credibility of their money, so they will just provide enough dollar so that there will be no inflation
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
October 17, 2013, 10:35:40 AM
#9
Quote
People usually list the example of hyperinflation in Weimar Republic or Zimbabwe, but that was at a speed of magnitudes increase in money supply every month

If you study these cases carefully, another important reason that those money lose value quickly is because the government use those printed money to buy foreign currency on the forex exchange to pay back their foreign debt, thus created a direct impact of money's exchange value against all other foreign currencies
That just puts a tangible number to inflation. Inflation still exists, no matter what, when there's money printing, only its just not as quantifiable.

Quote
What you stated is a true fact, but to change that fact is not easy. There are so many human factors involved, for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_illusion There is a reason that the money printing trick works, since majority of social members only care about their own business, which is counted in dollar
They also care about their own expenses, which is also counted in dollar.

At the very least, it explains who "loses."

From individual person's point of view, it is very difficult to observe a relationship between money supply and inflation. For example, FED increased money supply by 400% since 2008, but there is no 4X increase in daily expenses for household. Because most of these money went into banks' pocket and then saved back at FED as a reserve, banks receive trillions of dollar in the process, but they will spend it very carefully to ensure there will be no inflation

If millions of people receive extra cash in their account, the inflation will be immediate. But if only selected a few receive huge amount of cash, they can just have a meeting and decide the appropriate action to not trigger inflation

Again, it is human nature. If majority of people won't notice the inflation, they don't care. Ironically, since banks become super rich during the printing money business, it just strengthened people's trust for banks
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
October 17, 2013, 09:54:54 AM
#8
Quote
People usually list the example of hyperinflation in Weimar Republic or Zimbabwe, but that was at a speed of magnitudes increase in money supply every month

If you study these cases carefully, another important reason that those money lose value quickly is because the government use those printed money to buy foreign currency on the forex exchange to pay back their foreign debt, thus created a direct impact of money's exchange value against all other foreign currencies
That just puts a tangible number to inflation. Inflation still exists, no matter what, when there's money printing, only its just not as quantifiable.

Quote
What you stated is a true fact, but to change that fact is not easy. There are so many human factors involved, for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_illusion There is a reason that the money printing trick works, since majority of social members only care about their own business, which is counted in dollar
They also care about their own expenses, which is also counted in dollar.

At the very least, it explains who "loses."
newbie
Activity: 43
Merit: 0
October 17, 2013, 09:39:50 AM
#7
"Because people will work to create more wealth when they see more dollar, added dollar will create added wealth."
So if someone robs you on your way to work that'll make you work more productively that day? This system will fail when people can no longer survive because the leech of government and banks sucks them dry... Which depends on how long the elite are smart enough to live within their means and keep their slaves alive.
legendary
Activity: 1264
Merit: 1008
October 17, 2013, 04:55:42 AM
#6
Let's say that government want to stimulate the economy, they borrow 10 trillion dollar from the FED and spent them all, created lots of projects and hired many people and even reached 99% employment

Great idea!  Let's call it the New Deal. 
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
October 17, 2013, 03:46:10 AM
#5

The next thing you have to understand is that inflation feeds off of itself. Once it gets going, it is the same thing as debt, it just keeps on growing. The only way in which it can stop is deflation, i.e, people losing their jobs, which, you'd agree, is a negative outcome. Inflation rewards the spending of currency, which drives up demand for products, which drives up demand for labour, which begets higher prices for that demand and labour, creating more inflation (this is compounded since the government will be paying higher prices as well, thus borrowing more, thus the FED is printing more, thus even more inflation).

People usually list the example of hyperinflation in Weimar Republic or Zimbabwe, but that was at a speed of magnitudes increase in money supply every month

If you study these cases carefully, another important reason that those money lose value quickly is because the government use those printed money to buy foreign currency on the forex exchange to pay back their foreign debt, thus created a direct impact of money's exchange value against all other foreign currencies

Finally, let me let you in on a little secret. Despite all the talk of the evil government, bankers, etc... let me tell you. The government wants you employed. Even the bankers want you employed. No, it isn't out of the generosity of their hearts, its because the world needs work to be done, and they don't want to do it. They want you to do it. So, naturally, they'd be more than happy to give you a 'better' job so long as they don't have to give up anything, since they aren't, because the money is coming out of thin air. But, what happens, say, when you want to not work any more? When you wan't to retire? I'll tell you what happens: You can't. Because your savings are worthless, because of all of the inflation.

Perhaps now you are finally getting it. Money is just a number. These bankers have seen trillions, they don't particularly care if that number goes up or down. What they care about, is having access to resources, and not having to work for it, and having access to power. They want to enslave you. That is  exactly what inflation will do for them. You will get a 'better' job, only just so much 'better' as to barely cover the increased cost of food next week. You have to continually spend more and more money, or even, hopefully, go into debt and pay them even more money, just to live, so your 'better' jobs don't yield a 'better' life. And its just a hamster wheel, you can never invest, you can never become financially independent, because you never have any extra money, and if you did, that money would be devalued in a week. You just have to continue working, forever, never actually being able to save a 1942-dime, while the bankers silently take all the excess products out of all the rest of society, and easily and conveniently live off of that in comfort & leisure.

There are 2 ways for individuals to get power. Education & investment. Just as the Taliban take education away from the lower classes to keep themselves at the top, so does inflation take away your potential for investment. Don't let them do it.

What you stated is a true fact, but to change that fact is not easy. There are so many human factors involved, for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_illusion There is a reason that the money printing trick works, since majority of social members only care about their own business, which is counted in dollar
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
October 17, 2013, 02:53:24 AM
#4
"Second, FED did not lose anything, anyway their money is printed out of nothing"
Everyone who owns dollars loses.... The FED doesn't print dollars "out of nothing", there is the same amount of wealth in the world but more dollars representing it. Thus all dollars lose value.

Because people will work to create more wealth when they see more dollar, added dollar will create added wealth. And if they want to save, they can save in some other medium like gold/bitcoin, the purpose of dollar is to work as an income and need to be spent as quick as possible
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
October 16, 2013, 11:23:34 PM
#3
Quote
So, who was the loser in this process? I see none  Undecided

First, government did not lose anything, they created many jobs and stimulated the economy

Second, FED did not lose anything, anyway their money is printed out of nothing

Third, average people in the society did not lose anything, they got a better job, made some money and improved their life

The only counter-argument might be inflation. But price level normally is decided by profitability, if the demand rose (more money to make), the supply will increase to make more product and services (due to higher profitability), thus keep the price low. If the government is the largest customer for many enterprises, there will be a tough competition to get the order from government, the price level will be low due to competition

First off,  there will be inflation. IF companies are paying out more money (since people got 'better' jobs) they must be taking in more money as well. You yourself said that price is based on profitability. Now, you may say, a little inflation isn't a big deal, after all, people have higher paying jobs anyway, and thats a small price to pay for a better society.

The next thing you have to understand is that inflation feeds off of itself. Once it gets going, it is the same thing as debt, it just keeps on growing. The only way in which it can stop is deflation, i.e, people losing their jobs, which, you'd agree, is a negative outcome. Inflation rewards the spending of currency, which drives up demand for products, which drives up demand for labour, which begets higher prices for that demand and labour, creating more inflation (this is compounded since the government will be paying higher prices as well, thus borrowing more, thus the FED is printing more, thus even more inflation).

Finally, let me let you in on a little secret. Despite all the talk of the evil government, bankers, etc... let me tell you. The government wants you employed. Even the bankers want you employed. No, it isn't out of the generosity of their hearts, its because the world needs work to be done, and they don't want to do it. They want you to do it. So, naturally, they'd be more than happy to give you a 'better' job so long as they don't have to give up anything, since they aren't, because the money is coming out of thin air. But, what happens, say, when you want to not work any more? When you wan't to retire? I'll tell you what happens: You can't. Because your savings are worthless, because of all of the inflation.

Perhaps now you are finally getting it. Money is just a number. These bankers have seen trillions, they don't particularly care if that number goes up or down. What they care about, is having access to resources, and not having to work for it, and having access to power. They want to enslave you. That is  exactly what inflation will do for them. You will get a 'better' job, only just so much 'better' as to barely cover the increased cost of food next week. You have to continually spend more and more money, or even, hopefully, go into debt and pay them even more money, just to live, so your 'better' jobs don't yield a 'better' life. And its just a hamster wheel, you can never invest, you can never become financially independent, because you never have any extra money, and if you did, that money would be devalued in a week. You just have to continue working, forever, never actually being able to save a 1942-dime, while the bankers silently take all the excess products out of all the rest of society, and easily and conveniently live off of that in comfort & leisure.

There are 2 ways for individuals to get power. Education & investment. Just as the Taliban take education away from the lower classes to keep themselves at the top, so does inflation take away your potential for investment. Don't let them do it.
newbie
Activity: 43
Merit: 0
October 16, 2013, 07:34:31 PM
#2
"Second, FED did not lose anything, anyway their money is printed out of nothing"
Everyone who owns dollars loses.... The FED doesn't print dollars "out of nothing", there is the same amount of wealth in the world but more dollars representing it. Thus all dollars lose value.
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
October 16, 2013, 05:14:01 PM
#1
Let's say that government want to stimulate the economy, they borrow 10 trillion dollar from the FED and spent them all, created lots of projects and hired many people and even reached 99% employment

All those money spent becomes the income of various person in the society, and in turn the government collected some tax back. But they will never be able to pay back the original 10 trillion dollar

And the government requested to write off those debt from FED's balance sheet, they are gone
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

So, who was the loser in this process? I see none  Undecided

First, government did not lose anything, they created many jobs and stimulated the economy

Second, FED did not lose anything, anyway their money is printed out of nothing

Third, average people in the society did not lose anything, they got a better job, made some money and improved their life

The only counter-argument might be inflation. But price level normally is decided by profitability, if the demand rose (more money to make), the supply will increase to make more product and services (due to higher profitability), thus keep the price low. If the government is the largest customer for many enterprises, there will be a tough competition to get the order from government, the price level will be low due to competition

I still don't see how come such a simple system could fail??? Is it just a wishful thinking or pure psychological feeling  Huh
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