This is literally the inevitable conclusion of any economic system based on fractional reserve banking where chartered banks are able to produce new currency from nothing on their balance sheets as debt. There will never be enough money supply (M0) to pay off debt. And unlike more civilized cultures like the ancient Babylonians we don't have periodic jubilees for debt forgiveness for human people.
You don't necessarily need to switch off of such a system. But you do need to properly characterize it, rather than having nobel prize winning economists (and crappy news articles like this) get twisted into a pretzel trying to maintain incorrect dogmas about how it works.
Ehhh... I don't like either of your characterizations.
USA started on... very chaotic period. Continental Dollar was a failure in 1780s and the citizenry largely used the Spanish Peso, at least until the next Dollar came out IIRC. Eventually US Banking solidified upon the dual-standard of silver and gold. But... not really? A lot of those banks didn't actually hold that physical silver or gold, it was all virtual notes and paper pretending to be silver or gold. (Is this fractional reserve banking but on the silver standard? Depends on who you ask)
In the 1880s (if I got that right), the Silver standard was eradicated and the USA was largely on the gold standard. We were in a pretty turbulent time regardless, until the big-whammy hit in 1930s.
While "technically" on the Gold standard, FDR then issued Executive Order 6102 making gold illegal. Simultaneously, from the 1910s in this period, the US banking system was transitioning to the modern Federal Reserve system. I'm not sure exactly when fractional reserve banking hit in the Federal Reserve system, but I remember some important laws passing in the 1930s as well. Its all a moving target and difficult to say "X happened" at a particular point of history.
It was all happening at the same time. Different banks, different parts of the country, different states were in a complex web of Silver, Gold, dollars, independent notes, and so forth.
I'd personally say by the 1930s, with Gold becoming literally illegal, was when the USA fully transitioned into fractional reserve banking for the masses. Gold remained illegal until Nixon re-legalized it in the 1970s, but also finally removed gold from officially backing our currency (granted: with Gold being illegal, it didn't practically back our currency anymore for decades, so Nixon just made Gold float to the market rate and match reality, as opposed to pretending that we had a gold-backed system).
But that's just my opinion on the matter. Others can draw lines in the sand and almost arbitrarily argue any of these points we were "doing fractional reserve banking", or "on the gold standard", or whatever.
Because fractional reserve banking is the least worst way and it's very unlikely to change we have to acknowledge this power bias and mitigate it.
If chartered consumer bank is creating new M0 money supply as debt through loans or other processes it should not be legally allowed to be involved in stock and other market investments. Deposit and investment banks should not legally be allowed to mix. The immense profits and power to create new currency as debt should not have all it's incentives and value siphoned off into non-productive market manipulations and vehicles.
In the USA this is one first step, one we've taken before in recent history, that needs to be taken again to mitigate the centralized (~4k chartered banks in the USA) money supply creation issue of fractional reserve banking.
I've tried very hard these past few decades to understand what fractional reserve banking is without spiraling into becoming some whackjob conspiracy theorist. Can someone tell me if this is substantially wrong?
Through some combination of poorly chosen policies in centuries past, social inertia, and perhaps even a little ignorance even on the part of the experts, we now have a society that has normalized the idea that banks get to authorize people (and companies) to receive resources they don't currently have enough cash to purchase outright. When they authorize this, they pay the seller with imaginary money that they say they have (but don't really have). Thus the seller is (most of the time) made whole.
In return for this authorization, the borrowers pay the bank that principal back, along with interest.
In some more conservative ways of thinking, interest is the idea that when a lender risks his or her money loaning it to you, they should receive compensation for that risk.
But the bank didn't have the money to loan to them either. Whether this means the bank is taking less risk, or more risk, I can't even properly process at this point... but regardless of any hypothetical risk that it might be taking, what the interest really is for is nothing more than the fee for them authorizing that the person/company receive those resources. On that point I'm quite certain, the interest pays that "fee".
I do not believe this is a particularly biased take on the matter. I don't believe I've injected much politics into it. I think this system (such as it is) has arisen organically, and without much in the way of design or any group steering it to this.
It seems quite insane to me. Beyond the bounds of mere lunacy. Lovecraft never spoke of eldritch abominations so horrifying that they might cause a madness as profound as this.
Why are we allowing banks to do this? I get it that society needs someone to do this function. But...
1. Why are banks and their staff the most qualified to undertake the function?
2. How did legislatures and even monarchs ever allow this particular power to slip away from them, without even so much as a debate about why they couldn't be trusted to do it?
3. Even if we need this functionality, how do we know how often it should happen (and for whom), and why would this system both keep it from happening not enough and from happening too much? Especially since banks are incentivized to lend as much as possible in many (maybe even all) circumstances? Isn't this sort of like putting the crackhead in charge of the medicine locker key?
4. Why is no one talking about it in this way? Maybe I'm just fucked in the head, but I've never heard it explained like this, and it makes me wonder if I've got it all wrong. But none of the extant explanations are less crazy-sounding, not that I've ever found.
> Can someone tell me if this is substantially wrong?
Yes it is wrong in its almost entirety. I don't even know where to start. The fundamental assumption that "Banks don't have your money" is already wrong on the surface level, as all banks have to prove to the Government (FDIC in particular) that their assets are greater than their liabilities.
That is: if a bank owes $5 Billion to its customers, it needs to prove to the FDIC that it has at least $5 Billion hanging around somewhere.
Does the $5 Billion have to be cash? No. It can be a bond, it could be a mortgage, etc. etc. The risk-on/risk-off of lending that asset to others to make further profits is the entire damn point of a bank.
But banks cannot print money, except for the Fed and Treasury in collaboration with each other.
> as all banks have to prove to the Government (FDIC in particular) that their assets are greater than their liabilities.
What assets? Defined as you would define them, the things most of us think about as liabilities (outstanding loans) are the same assets.
It's more than a little circular.
> if a bank owes $5 Billion to its customers, it needs to prove to the FDIC that it has at least $5 Billion hanging around somewhere.
This simply isn't the case. Neither in physical cash deposits, nor in electronic deposits of any sort. It may have some collateral, of the sort that isn't and can't be made liquid, and those values are all inflated into the stratosphere anyway. If they did have to liquidate this collateral, the prices would all collapse, and it'd have a tiny fraction of what they had claimed they were worth just days prior.
> No. It can be a bond,
That's another word for "outstanding loan" as I understand it. They gave (imaginary?) cash to some company or municipality somewhere, got a fancy piece of paper saying they can "cash it in 20 years later". That's called a loan.
> it could be a mortgage, e
I thought you were claiming these were liabilities not two sentences higher? If they're not liabilities, what the hell are they? You make it sound as if all banks ever have is assets.
> But banks cannot print money, except for the Fed and Treasury in collaboration with each other.
Who needs printed paper, when you can just modify a few bits in a few flipflops somewhere that amount to an electronic ledger?
They can't print money, but they can certainly let me use the credit card they mailed to me, and they aren't digging around in the couch cushions for some coins so that they have that covered with "assets" as you contend above.
Hell, if I understand you correctly, they could offer someone another mortgage, and then use that as the "asset" that covers my credit card loan (and my credit card loan is also an asset that covers the mortgage!).
> What assets? Defined as you would define them, the things most of us think about as liabilities (outstanding loans) are the same assets.
Liabilities are money you owe someone else. Assets are money (and things) people owe you.
You're playing word games with extremely precise words and trying to pretend that these words... don't mean what they mean.
Its perfectly fine to owe $5 Billion to other people, if you yourself have $5 Billion owed to you. Assets and liabilities cancel each other out in all forms of modern accounting.
> They can't print money, but they can certainly let me use the credit card they mailed to me, and they aren't digging around in the couch cushions for some coins so that they have that covered with "assets" as you contend above.
Are you seriously trying to say that Costco doesn't get their money when you swipe a credit card and pay for your groceries?
The banks that fund credit cards have huge amounts of cash on hand. They pay Costco _BEFORE_ you pay the credit card companies (especially if you keep the balance beyond the payment period), and that's only possible because they have huge reserves of cash. Beyond "just" an asset, like true cold-hard cash that they're transferring.
Now the timing is a bit weird. Maybe credit cards pay in net 30. That's somewhat common. But if they have an asset (ex: a 30-day bond) with enough money coming in by day#30, then that's fine. The bond matures, the credit card gets the money on Day#30, the credit card company transfers it to Costco.
Super-short bonds, such as 7-day, 30-day, or even 90-day bonds, are treated as near-cash for good reason. With industry pseudo-standard net30 deliveries of cash, a 30-day bond basically is as good as cash.
This might not be a banking system. This might be part of a social system. A civil society used to have more value than a functioning banking system.
There were also ideas that the corner of the ones crop fields couldn't be harvested. These corners should be for people with nothing and the bests of the land.
Yes. I think before modern money, cancelling out debts would be simpler (just throw some runes in the sea, or whatever), and they didn't even have mortgages. But now everything is debt and everything is financialized, including the debt itself.
I reckon cancelling debt would be great for the rich who are probably leveraged to the hilt to avoid selling anything, to avoid taxes. It would be decent for the middle class who keep their houses debt free. And bad for poor people, who just get this months payday loan wiped out, so they can afford that car repair, and still need to pay rent. House prices would double, due to serviceability increases, so they have less chance of owning!
It's a really old idea that if you haven't gotten your value back by x period of years give up the value is gone.
It could be that it's older cultures that operated this way. The idea is that a loan turns into slavery at some point and that is unacceptable. There is also the aspect that if you could go this long without the loan being repaid you have enough already.
This. If the only way for more money (credit) to come into existence is debt, then someone will have to keep taking debt. For past debts to be paid off, more debt needs to be created.
How exactly is this a stable system? Who the fuck thought this would last?
Most households with a mortgage are also not, on a yearly basis, severely outspending their income. The problem is not necessarily the debt - it's the debt plus the deficit.
Japan debt to GDP ratio is already over 220% public debt. The best thing about it is that the Fed holds most of that debt so they kind of monetized it with no major repercussions.
Modern Monetary Theory has stated that high public debt loads isn't a problem, and frankly so far it doesn't seem like the markets will ever care. Until it does, and then it will be a disaster but both Japan and the US will never pay off its debts.
They're talking about the US Fed, aka the US debt, and now you're talking about Japan.
Anyway lets be real, the reason why sudden think pieces on the debt are coming out is that it's going to be election season soon, and a Democrat is the incumbent.
Red Team and Blue Team both pearl clutch about the national debt when it is politically expedient for them to do so. Remember all the hullabaloo about the national debt clock back when it needed an extra digit around 2008?
> one of the lowest rates of family formation, and a high rate of suicide among young people
Which is comparable with South Korea.
And looks to be tied to poor work-life balance, lack of workplace flexibility, lack of parental leave, high cost of living etc rather that macro-enonomic issues like debt levels.
1. Will there ever come a point where the debts can't reasonably be repaid?
2. Will the people who are owed the money have the political power/influence to be able to force the issue?
3. The issue forced, will there be any feasible mechanism of paying it back other than raising taxes rapidly and horrifically?
4. Given that this is a public (United States) that is massively in debt (to the tune of nearly twice our annual GDP), will they be able to absorb that hit on top of everything else?
I'm not sure I subscribe to the school of economics that says money is magical and debt never has to be paid back, but if I'm wrong in that, I'd love to here what part of this I misunderstand.
>...the school of economics that says money is magical and debt never has to be paid back
Well...debt generally has to be paid back, but unlike people countries don't get old and retire.
Countries have an unending supply of new taxpayers being born every year.
There's no hard limit to how much a country can renew and restructure its debts.
Only the market's belief in a country's future economic prospects affect the price of rolling the debts forward, through the issuing of new state-backed bonds.
> Well...debt generally has to be paid back, but unlike people countries don't get old and retire.
They actually do. Japan is currently starting to retire now... to the point that there are fewer of them today than there were last year. The demographic implosion.
We're not that far behind them.
> Countries have an unending supply of new taxpayers being born every year.
This seems unlikely. In every western nation on Planet Earth, the fertility rate is going down, quite quickly, with no indication that it will plateau. There is no indication of how circumstances would have to change for it to rebound. There may be none, but if they are, they're likely the sort of circumstances unlikely to be found within the conditions we're discussing (improving economy, higher wages, etc).
There is a finite supply of new taxpayers, a relatively small one, and there is no evidence that it is unending.
> There's no hard limit to how much a country can renew and restructure its debts.
Like when Zimbabwe just prints new money with more zeroes on it? We'll all be starving quadrillionaires?
Sure, games can be played. But eventually people catch on that it's all a game, and they weren't ever going to win it. And then they stop playing... not because they don't want to, but because they can't anymore.
> Only the market's belief
You're using the word "belief". Is this a joke?
Belief is an important part of scams and cons. Is this a big con game?
> through the issuing of new state-backed bonds.
Who would ever buy another treasury in the circumstances we are talking about? I just asked what would happen when the government can't make good on the already extant treasury notes.
Saying "they'll sell more treasuries to pay those back"... am I just too dumb to get the joke and everyone here on Hackernews is laughing at me?
Sovereign debt is fundamentally different to any other kind of liability. So yes, I believe that your comment "it doesn't seem like the markets will ever care" should remain true so long as the real economic activity of the USA is paramount to global functioning.
Just because they don't care now doesn't mean they won't in the future and like you said it is a potential disaster if they do. Because it will come at the worst time because that is when these things happen. I think a reasonable amount of debt is healthy and fine, but people want to spend and think that the bill doesn't ever come due. Sometimes inflation eats it and it was good that you spent the money, sometimes your face will get ripped off and you need to be careful.
Here is a broad overview of some current Modern Monetary Theory thinking. It's a good read, dispels a lot of fearmongering while also exposing where the real problems lie.
MMT is simply a way to get rid of progressive income tax and wealth taxes (property).
Instead, everyone pays equally through inflation, and retirees get screwed as their savings get inflated to dust and they have no income to make it up.
Maybe that's what you want.
But if you think you can just magically fund the government on unicorns because the market is dumb, I have some 1000 year T-bills at -10% yield to sell you.
> MMT is simply a way to get rid of progressive income tax and wealth taxes (property).
No, its not. MMT proponents tend to support progressive income tax and wealth taxes more than currently exists. The MMT observation that the only real constraint on fiscal policy is the monetary impacts, not fiscal balance, also means that fiscal policy tools are appropriate responses to the traditional triggers for monetary action. Need to suck money out of the economy to kill inflation: instead of raising interest rates, add supplemental high-end income taxes (without added spending.) Need to pump money into the economy because of sluggish activity? Adopt immediate low-end benefits (without additional taxes).
> But if you think you can just magically fund the government on unicorns because the market is dumb
That’s not what MMT believes.
MMT believes that the response of the market (monetary effects) are the only constraint on government tax and spending balance, that the idea of a fixed purse (the “fisc” in “fiscal”) that must be filled by taxes or borrowing is only true with commodity, not fiat, money, and that cosplaying commodity money when you are working with fiat just results in an inaccurate view of the policy landscape.
Modern Monetary Theory basically enshrines the fact that scamming the general public of its wealth is a perfectly fine practice, especially when they don't notice it's happening, boiling frog style.
It also only works if - like in the case of Japan - the debt is held internally to a country, a captive audience if you will, which has no choice but to be ridden roughshod by its rulers.
Is the US sovereign debt held internally? I don't know, but my bet would be that a large chunk isn't.
Although that may no matter as long as they are the planet's hegemon, which sort of makes any debt holder internal.
But that latter status quo may not last very much longer.
I'd like to venture a counter-point. High debt loads are manageable - if interest rates are low. This begs the question of what meaning a low interest rate has. In practice, at an individual level, interest rates are a combination of three factors.
1 - The Risk rate. (How do avoid you simply defaulting on me)
2 - The opportunity cost. (How much more is Person A willing to pay me than Person B)
3 - The time value. (How much do I need to make on this loan to make it worth the payoff time).
While you can argue that an efficient financial system with robust liquidity should drive 1 & 3 to 0. It does not make sense for 2 to be non-zero. When the opportunity cost is zero, it directly implies that capital holders have vastly more dollars than there are viable loans, or that the cost of changing a human beings task from their current task to a different task has gone to zero.
Neither of these statements should be true, capital should be distributed such that capital holders do not have more money than they can lend - and there should always be a non-zero opportunity cost from picking up someone from their current task. The latter point directly ties to the potential for wage growth in the economy.
Here's the one that worries me: Interest payments on the debt are projected to grow to 6.7 percent of GDP in thirty years (right now they're 1.9 percent and Social Security outlays are 4.9 percent).
Deficits are projected to be 10 percent of GDP then, meaning 2/3rds of our borrowing will be done to pay off existing borrowing. That's not good.
It’s not like the latter division is an obviously stable way to analyze the issue.
If we just ran a larger deficit, say 27% of GDP, that ratio would be (temporarily) much lower at only 25% of new borrowing. But that wouldn’t be obviously “better”.
As long foreign countries swap their real assets (oil, grains, metals, manufactured goods, etc) with printed US dollars (nominal assets), they can increase (print) public debt (more dollars). That's why it is important for the US to have USD as the global currency, thereby giving an ability to print whatever money needed. This luxury is not available for most of the countries. That's the crux of modern monetary theory.
> This luxury is not available for most of the countries.
And it's increasingly likely that it won't be available to the US for much longer.
The fact that the US weaponized their currency during the Ukraine / Russia war has not gone unnoticed by most non-western economies.
The first couple of chinks in the US armor are:
- BRICS countries setting up an alternative payment system to SWIFT
- China offering to buy oil directly in yuan and guaranteeing that any excessive yuan balance would be settle in actual gold - a deal that has been accepted by Saudi Arabia.
- China negotiating with ASEAN countries to trade goods directly for yuan, with the same excessive balance guaranteed to be paid in gold.
- Many countries are starting to diversify they foreign exchange reserve away from the USD, incorporating Yuans, Euros, and - yes - rubles (which can be used to purchase all kinds of useful raw materials from Russia, the largest landmass country on earth)
>- Many countries are starting to diversify they foreign exchange reserve away from the USD, incorporating Yuans, Euros, and - yes - rubles (which can be used to purchase all kinds of useful raw materials from Russia, the largest landmass country on earth)
At 58.4%, the US dollar's share of global currency reserves is comparable to that in 1995 and 1985. It has declined from its 21st-century high, but so has the Euro. The renminbi has more than doubled ... from 1.1 to 2.7%.<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reserve_currency#Global_curren...>
It seems as though national debt has transitioned from something that ever needs to be paid off to instead just being a graph of inflation. The Fed holds the majority of the US Debt, and that will likely increasingly be the case.
Governments don't need to tax anymore, they simply generate the money they need by borrowing from the reserve. There is no longer any expectation that this will ever be paid back. The debt is really nothing more than a graph showing the expansion of the money supply, and the interest rate is nothing more than the vector of where the debt is going.
Someone framed debt to gdp ratio like this: if your debt is 150% of your GDP. It would take a year and a half to pay off your debt if all the national income (gdp) was allocated to payments.
No obviously this isn’t a realistic policy - but if we can have “war-time” economies as proven in the past it reasons that we can have an economy solely focused on the repayment of debt (idk, high taxes for a decade?). Am I tripping?
Maybe a better comparison is to a post war economy? The US paid off the WW2 debt in about 17 years through ordinary taxation, but US taxes today are much lower than they were after WW2, at least for the very rich.
If one looks at the national debt clock I think we each owe just $300k.
In these terms it seems quite manageable. My guess is that if it was an actual problem we would solve it. My guess is that it is mostly a talking point.
I get that countries don't exactly operate like a family budget, but can someone explain what the intended steady state is? There's only really three options: pay it off, keep it at the current debt level (or keep it steady at some percent level), or continuing to let it grow, and it seems like the first two options aren't (credibly) on the table.
You missed what the US actually does: it grows its economy until the debt is insignificant. The US has never (in modern times) substantially reduced its debt level in dollar terms.
This has been growing faster than CBO projections, though obviously the last few years were unique (hopefully). Found a graph from the 2015 CBO report that is still in a wikipedia article that projected we'd be at about 75% debt/GDP now[1]. Another article from 2020 as pandemic aid spending was going out warned we could hit 106% by this year.
IIUC there's not a line that we must not cross, but the level, the rate, and the can-kicking on all this debt spending, and debt in general, worries me (even as someone who leans to the left and supports big government projects).
> but can someone explain what the intended steady state is?
There is no intended steady state. (Also, projections of government debt to size of the economy into the future fluctuate wildly based on current circumstances, because they almost never have a reasonable basis for predicting the combination of future economic conditions and future fiscal decisions.)
I watched this recent interview with Stanley Druckenmiller (one of the best macro investors with an incredible track record) on more problems we will be facing in a few years. Mainly about how the US is not going to be able to pay for our older generations healthcare unless taxes get hiked to obscene levels. And that these predictions they made years ago are coming to fruition slowly but that their predictions of course could not predict the wild COVID spending that occurred. Future looks interesting to be sure!
I think something shown in the ideological hand here is that the tax hikes are framed as regressive tax hikes. You can make up a significant portion of the gap by adopting the sort of progressive taxes we had pre Reagan.
There's also probably substantial savings to be had by moving to a single payer healthcare system which I think we should expect in the coming decades - support creeps up every single year.
US debt is such a tough thing to wrap my head around.
About half of the debt is to... the US government. And all of it is in US dollars, that the US government can print.
So the US could get out of debt tomorrow if they wanted, forgiving the loans it made to itself, and then printing enough to pay off the rest. Which presumably wouldn't impact its ability to lend money to itself.
The tough part for me to wrap my head around is why the debt is important at all, given the US is more or less fully in control of it.
I think this quirk is easier to wrap your head around if you think of the consequences of doing it. Modern economics have baffled me at times, but I’d fully expect our currency to be extremely devalued if they did that. Currency holders would end up paying for it as they couldn’t purchase as much.
Many of the loans made to itself are wrapped up in pension funds, SSI, lots of future expenses to cover, etc...so just forgiving the loans wouldn't help much unless you want a bunch of angry old people rioting on the street.
Another way of thinking about it is the US deficit is high because savings needs are also high. It isn't just a "we need to spend more money", it is also a "we need to borrow more money" (due to lots of savings demand). The problem is that we aren't using those savings needs productively enough, so we are still going to get hit in the future.
China also has a similar problem, but one could argue that they are leveraging savings needs effectively through lots of infrastructure and other capital projects. BUT Japan went that route as well, and it didn't work out too well for them.
So then is the public debt in a large part just a complex accounting system the government uses to manage its business? At least in the case of the US where most of it is held by the US? Genuinely curious, every time I think about this it feels like turtles all the way down.
You think of US as a monolithic entity and that really isn't true. There are lots of agencies with lots of employees and future obligations; they all have their own budgets and "books"; congress doesn't like bailing out an agency due to them thinking they have the whole US budget to spend. Maybe if we bothered to just force all public employees into 401Ks, we could summarize it as mostly SSI and Medicare future needs (though we are increasingly hitting pay as you go).
You can think of it this way, the higher the debt, the more of your tax dollars go towards paying off that debt, which means less money goes into services you think you're paying for. The earners of this are institutions and the wealthy who lend the money to the government.
A government can print more money to pay off that debt (causes inflation), it can lower interest rates on that debt (also causes inflation), cut costs (causes deflation but politically unpopular), or it can raise taxes (also causes deflation but politically unpopular). In the first two cases, the value of your savings diminishes.
Government debt is not the same as household debt. The government, as the issuer of its own currency, has the power to create money. This ability sets it apart from households, businesses, and city or state governments that rely on income and borrowing to finance their spending.
Government debt is a byproduct of government spending. The primary purpose of government spending is to inject money into the economy, creating demand and stimulating economic activity. When the government spends more than it collects in taxes, it runs a deficit and issues debt as a way to accommodate the excess spending.
Taxes are thus a tool to manage inflation. By reducing the amount of money in circulation, taxes help prevent excessive demand that could lead to inflationary pressures.
Republicans haven't really cared about paying off the debts since before Regan. (Except for when they're not in power).
So it wasn't actually the norm when Clinton tried to make a dent in the foreign debts of the US.
Modern economic theory says that there's a big difference between normal household finances and national economics.
Countries don't reach retirement age, they get new taxpayers every year. (Either through births or immigration).
So there's essentially no limit to how many times they can roll the debts over via issuing new state-backed bonds, except for how the market views the country's future prospects.
There's no such thing as "publicly held debt" in USA. USA borrows immense amounts of money from foreign economies (China and others) with no intention whatsoever to ever pay the principal back. Happy to just pay the interest for all of eternity. On and on in perpetuity forever.
USA spends a huge portion of the money that it borrows on its military. If those countries ever want to "call" their money back then they will face USA's military if the negotiations deteriorate to that level.
> USA borrows immense amounts of money from foreign economies (China and others) with no intention whatsoever to ever pay the principal back.
That isn't true. US treasuring notes are in demand because they are incredibly reliable. The US doesn't default on them, so they are safe places to stash billions of dollars that you might not want floating around in your economy (which is why China is such an enthusiastic customer for US Treasuries).
> USA spends a huge portion of the money that it borrows on its military.
US spending on military is 3.1% of GDP, expected to go to 2.3% by 2033. The US is not borrowing from other economies to fund its military, they don't have to. If that number starts creeping up (like to say 10% of GDP), bad things will happen. But if other countries stop lending us money, we aren't really going to be in trouble at all (we just stop selling treasuries, our military is funded as a part of American production, it isn't using much production from China).
In comparison, China spends 2.7% of its GDP on its military, so not far off from the USA, although the PLA is sort of entangled in the private economy, so it isn't so clear.
They talk about tax revenues as if that’s a relevant component of bond market cash flows. It’s not.
I have an easy solution for bringing it down to any number you want: more government spending, the more wasteful the better.
You see, government spending is part of that ‘economic activity’ number. In fact, certain types of especially wasteful spending require purchases that guarantee it will count for double in that number. Of course this creates more debt, so every year you have to create enough money to increase your spending by a huge factor, but it works in the formula used here.
This is not a new idea; it was most recently popularized by an Obama economic plan to introduce stimulus on the same premise. And he’s right; spending does bring down the number temporarily. Is it insanity to believe that this represents an economic benefit? Well, you may recognize this response from Rick Santelli:
“You can’t buy your way into prosperity. And if the multiplier that all of these Washington economists are selling us is over one, then we never have to worry about the economy again. The government should spend a trillion dollars an hour because we’ll get $1.5 trillion back.”
Now as a historical exercise, I would like just one example of a long-term financially-responsible central government that had full control of the issuance of their own legal tender. I’m not suggesting a different system; I’m merely pointing out the possible futility of our expectations.
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[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 146 ms ] threadUSA started on... very chaotic period. Continental Dollar was a failure in 1780s and the citizenry largely used the Spanish Peso, at least until the next Dollar came out IIRC. Eventually US Banking solidified upon the dual-standard of silver and gold. But... not really? A lot of those banks didn't actually hold that physical silver or gold, it was all virtual notes and paper pretending to be silver or gold. (Is this fractional reserve banking but on the silver standard? Depends on who you ask)
In the 1880s (if I got that right), the Silver standard was eradicated and the USA was largely on the gold standard. We were in a pretty turbulent time regardless, until the big-whammy hit in 1930s.
While "technically" on the Gold standard, FDR then issued Executive Order 6102 making gold illegal. Simultaneously, from the 1910s in this period, the US banking system was transitioning to the modern Federal Reserve system. I'm not sure exactly when fractional reserve banking hit in the Federal Reserve system, but I remember some important laws passing in the 1930s as well. Its all a moving target and difficult to say "X happened" at a particular point of history.
It was all happening at the same time. Different banks, different parts of the country, different states were in a complex web of Silver, Gold, dollars, independent notes, and so forth.
I'd personally say by the 1930s, with Gold becoming literally illegal, was when the USA fully transitioned into fractional reserve banking for the masses. Gold remained illegal until Nixon re-legalized it in the 1970s, but also finally removed gold from officially backing our currency (granted: with Gold being illegal, it didn't practically back our currency anymore for decades, so Nixon just made Gold float to the market rate and match reality, as opposed to pretending that we had a gold-backed system).
But that's just my opinion on the matter. Others can draw lines in the sand and almost arbitrarily argue any of these points we were "doing fractional reserve banking", or "on the gold standard", or whatever.
If chartered consumer bank is creating new M0 money supply as debt through loans or other processes it should not be legally allowed to be involved in stock and other market investments. Deposit and investment banks should not legally be allowed to mix. The immense profits and power to create new currency as debt should not have all it's incentives and value siphoned off into non-productive market manipulations and vehicles.
In the USA this is one first step, one we've taken before in recent history, that needs to be taken again to mitigate the centralized (~4k chartered banks in the USA) money supply creation issue of fractional reserve banking.
Presumably this would just look like deposit banks only ever... what? Buying US government debt?
Through some combination of poorly chosen policies in centuries past, social inertia, and perhaps even a little ignorance even on the part of the experts, we now have a society that has normalized the idea that banks get to authorize people (and companies) to receive resources they don't currently have enough cash to purchase outright. When they authorize this, they pay the seller with imaginary money that they say they have (but don't really have). Thus the seller is (most of the time) made whole.
In return for this authorization, the borrowers pay the bank that principal back, along with interest.
In some more conservative ways of thinking, interest is the idea that when a lender risks his or her money loaning it to you, they should receive compensation for that risk.
But the bank didn't have the money to loan to them either. Whether this means the bank is taking less risk, or more risk, I can't even properly process at this point... but regardless of any hypothetical risk that it might be taking, what the interest really is for is nothing more than the fee for them authorizing that the person/company receive those resources. On that point I'm quite certain, the interest pays that "fee".
I do not believe this is a particularly biased take on the matter. I don't believe I've injected much politics into it. I think this system (such as it is) has arisen organically, and without much in the way of design or any group steering it to this.
It seems quite insane to me. Beyond the bounds of mere lunacy. Lovecraft never spoke of eldritch abominations so horrifying that they might cause a madness as profound as this.
Why are we allowing banks to do this? I get it that society needs someone to do this function. But...
1. Why are banks and their staff the most qualified to undertake the function?
2. How did legislatures and even monarchs ever allow this particular power to slip away from them, without even so much as a debate about why they couldn't be trusted to do it?
3. Even if we need this functionality, how do we know how often it should happen (and for whom), and why would this system both keep it from happening not enough and from happening too much? Especially since banks are incentivized to lend as much as possible in many (maybe even all) circumstances? Isn't this sort of like putting the crackhead in charge of the medicine locker key?
4. Why is no one talking about it in this way? Maybe I'm just fucked in the head, but I've never heard it explained like this, and it makes me wonder if I've got it all wrong. But none of the extant explanations are less crazy-sounding, not that I've ever found.
Yes it is wrong in its almost entirety. I don't even know where to start. The fundamental assumption that "Banks don't have your money" is already wrong on the surface level, as all banks have to prove to the Government (FDIC in particular) that their assets are greater than their liabilities.
That is: if a bank owes $5 Billion to its customers, it needs to prove to the FDIC that it has at least $5 Billion hanging around somewhere.
Does the $5 Billion have to be cash? No. It can be a bond, it could be a mortgage, etc. etc. The risk-on/risk-off of lending that asset to others to make further profits is the entire damn point of a bank.
But banks cannot print money, except for the Fed and Treasury in collaboration with each other.
What assets? Defined as you would define them, the things most of us think about as liabilities (outstanding loans) are the same assets.
It's more than a little circular.
> if a bank owes $5 Billion to its customers, it needs to prove to the FDIC that it has at least $5 Billion hanging around somewhere.
This simply isn't the case. Neither in physical cash deposits, nor in electronic deposits of any sort. It may have some collateral, of the sort that isn't and can't be made liquid, and those values are all inflated into the stratosphere anyway. If they did have to liquidate this collateral, the prices would all collapse, and it'd have a tiny fraction of what they had claimed they were worth just days prior.
> No. It can be a bond,
That's another word for "outstanding loan" as I understand it. They gave (imaginary?) cash to some company or municipality somewhere, got a fancy piece of paper saying they can "cash it in 20 years later". That's called a loan.
> it could be a mortgage, e
I thought you were claiming these were liabilities not two sentences higher? If they're not liabilities, what the hell are they? You make it sound as if all banks ever have is assets.
> But banks cannot print money, except for the Fed and Treasury in collaboration with each other.
Who needs printed paper, when you can just modify a few bits in a few flipflops somewhere that amount to an electronic ledger?
They can't print money, but they can certainly let me use the credit card they mailed to me, and they aren't digging around in the couch cushions for some coins so that they have that covered with "assets" as you contend above.
Hell, if I understand you correctly, they could offer someone another mortgage, and then use that as the "asset" that covers my credit card loan (and my credit card loan is also an asset that covers the mortgage!).
Liabilities are money you owe someone else. Assets are money (and things) people owe you.
You're playing word games with extremely precise words and trying to pretend that these words... don't mean what they mean.
Its perfectly fine to owe $5 Billion to other people, if you yourself have $5 Billion owed to you. Assets and liabilities cancel each other out in all forms of modern accounting.
> They can't print money, but they can certainly let me use the credit card they mailed to me, and they aren't digging around in the couch cushions for some coins so that they have that covered with "assets" as you contend above.
Are you seriously trying to say that Costco doesn't get their money when you swipe a credit card and pay for your groceries?
The banks that fund credit cards have huge amounts of cash on hand. They pay Costco _BEFORE_ you pay the credit card companies (especially if you keep the balance beyond the payment period), and that's only possible because they have huge reserves of cash. Beyond "just" an asset, like true cold-hard cash that they're transferring.
Now the timing is a bit weird. Maybe credit cards pay in net 30. That's somewhat common. But if they have an asset (ex: a 30-day bond) with enough money coming in by day#30, then that's fine. The bond matures, the credit card gets the money on Day#30, the credit card company transfers it to Costco.
Super-short bonds, such as 7-day, 30-day, or even 90-day bonds, are treated as near-cash for good reason. With industry pseudo-standard net30 deliveries of cash, a 30-day bond basically is as good as cash.
How would that even work? Why would you ever repay debt if you could just wait for it to be forgiven?
There were also ideas that the corner of the ones crop fields couldn't be harvested. These corners should be for people with nothing and the bests of the land.
I reckon cancelling debt would be great for the rich who are probably leveraged to the hilt to avoid selling anything, to avoid taxes. It would be decent for the middle class who keep their houses debt free. And bad for poor people, who just get this months payday loan wiped out, so they can afford that car repair, and still need to pay rent. House prices would double, due to serviceability increases, so they have less chance of owning!
It could be that it's older cultures that operated this way. The idea is that a loan turns into slavery at some point and that is unacceptable. There is also the aspect that if you could go this long without the loan being repaid you have enough already.
How exactly is this a stable system? Who the fuck thought this would last?
You're correct. It's very likely to be far worse than that.
It's subjective if you think our borrowed spending is causing more harm than good.
Modern Monetary Theory has stated that high public debt loads isn't a problem, and frankly so far it doesn't seem like the markets will ever care. Until it does, and then it will be a disaster but both Japan and the US will never pay off its debts.
You mean beside a lost 30 years, one of the lowest rates of family formation, and a high rate of suicide among young people?
Sure.
Anyway lets be real, the reason why sudden think pieces on the debt are coming out is that it's going to be election season soon, and a Democrat is the incumbent.
Which is comparable with South Korea.
And looks to be tied to poor work-life balance, lack of workplace flexibility, lack of parental leave, high cost of living etc rather that macro-enonomic issues like debt levels.
2. Will the people who are owed the money have the political power/influence to be able to force the issue?
3. The issue forced, will there be any feasible mechanism of paying it back other than raising taxes rapidly and horrifically?
4. Given that this is a public (United States) that is massively in debt (to the tune of nearly twice our annual GDP), will they be able to absorb that hit on top of everything else?
I'm not sure I subscribe to the school of economics that says money is magical and debt never has to be paid back, but if I'm wrong in that, I'd love to here what part of this I misunderstand.
Well...debt generally has to be paid back, but unlike people countries don't get old and retire.
Countries have an unending supply of new taxpayers being born every year.
There's no hard limit to how much a country can renew and restructure its debts.
Only the market's belief in a country's future economic prospects affect the price of rolling the debts forward, through the issuing of new state-backed bonds.
They actually do. Japan is currently starting to retire now... to the point that there are fewer of them today than there were last year. The demographic implosion.
We're not that far behind them.
> Countries have an unending supply of new taxpayers being born every year.
This seems unlikely. In every western nation on Planet Earth, the fertility rate is going down, quite quickly, with no indication that it will plateau. There is no indication of how circumstances would have to change for it to rebound. There may be none, but if they are, they're likely the sort of circumstances unlikely to be found within the conditions we're discussing (improving economy, higher wages, etc).
There is a finite supply of new taxpayers, a relatively small one, and there is no evidence that it is unending.
> There's no hard limit to how much a country can renew and restructure its debts.
Like when Zimbabwe just prints new money with more zeroes on it? We'll all be starving quadrillionaires?
Sure, games can be played. But eventually people catch on that it's all a game, and they weren't ever going to win it. And then they stop playing... not because they don't want to, but because they can't anymore.
> Only the market's belief
You're using the word "belief". Is this a joke?
Belief is an important part of scams and cons. Is this a big con game?
> through the issuing of new state-backed bonds.
Who would ever buy another treasury in the circumstances we are talking about? I just asked what would happen when the government can't make good on the already extant treasury notes.
Saying "they'll sell more treasuries to pay those back"... am I just too dumb to get the joke and everyone here on Hackernews is laughing at me?
https://fictitiouscapital.substack.com/p/money-myths-and-deb...
https://fictitiouscapital.substack.com/p/5
https://fictitiouscapital.substack.com/p/8-the-global-reserv...
Instead, everyone pays equally through inflation, and retirees get screwed as their savings get inflated to dust and they have no income to make it up.
Maybe that's what you want.
But if you think you can just magically fund the government on unicorns because the market is dumb, I have some 1000 year T-bills at -10% yield to sell you.
No, its not. MMT proponents tend to support progressive income tax and wealth taxes more than currently exists. The MMT observation that the only real constraint on fiscal policy is the monetary impacts, not fiscal balance, also means that fiscal policy tools are appropriate responses to the traditional triggers for monetary action. Need to suck money out of the economy to kill inflation: instead of raising interest rates, add supplemental high-end income taxes (without added spending.) Need to pump money into the economy because of sluggish activity? Adopt immediate low-end benefits (without additional taxes).
> But if you think you can just magically fund the government on unicorns because the market is dumb
That’s not what MMT believes.
MMT believes that the response of the market (monetary effects) are the only constraint on government tax and spending balance, that the idea of a fixed purse (the “fisc” in “fiscal”) that must be filled by taxes or borrowing is only true with commodity, not fiat, money, and that cosplaying commodity money when you are working with fiat just results in an inaccurate view of the policy landscape.
Modern Monetary Theory basically enshrines the fact that scamming the general public of its wealth is a perfectly fine practice, especially when they don't notice it's happening, boiling frog style.
It also only works if - like in the case of Japan - the debt is held internally to a country, a captive audience if you will, which has no choice but to be ridden roughshod by its rulers.
Is the US sovereign debt held internally? I don't know, but my bet would be that a large chunk isn't.
Although that may no matter as long as they are the planet's hegemon, which sort of makes any debt holder internal.
But that latter status quo may not last very much longer.
1 - The Risk rate. (How do avoid you simply defaulting on me)
2 - The opportunity cost. (How much more is Person A willing to pay me than Person B)
3 - The time value. (How much do I need to make on this loan to make it worth the payoff time).
While you can argue that an efficient financial system with robust liquidity should drive 1 & 3 to 0. It does not make sense for 2 to be non-zero. When the opportunity cost is zero, it directly implies that capital holders have vastly more dollars than there are viable loans, or that the cost of changing a human beings task from their current task to a different task has gone to zero.
Neither of these statements should be true, capital should be distributed such that capital holders do not have more money than they can lend - and there should always be a non-zero opportunity cost from picking up someone from their current task. The latter point directly ties to the potential for wage growth in the economy.
Whoa whoa whoa -- let's not get carried away there, Mr. Optimistic-pants.
Here's the one that worries me: Interest payments on the debt are projected to grow to 6.7 percent of GDP in thirty years (right now they're 1.9 percent and Social Security outlays are 4.9 percent).
Deficits are projected to be 10 percent of GDP then, meaning 2/3rds of our borrowing will be done to pay off existing borrowing. That's not good.
If we just ran a larger deficit, say 27% of GDP, that ratio would be (temporarily) much lower at only 25% of new borrowing. But that wouldn’t be obviously “better”.
This is, of course, occurring currently we’re just talking about a sliding scale now.
A debt for our children’s children’s children to worry over. Nothing to see here. Move along citizen.
And it's increasingly likely that it won't be available to the US for much longer.
The fact that the US weaponized their currency during the Ukraine / Russia war has not gone unnoticed by most non-western economies.
The first couple of chinks in the US armor are:
At 58.4%, the US dollar's share of global currency reserves is comparable to that in 1995 and 1985. It has declined from its 21st-century high, but so has the Euro. The renminbi has more than doubled ... from 1.1 to 2.7%.<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reserve_currency#Global_curren...>
Governments don't need to tax anymore, they simply generate the money they need by borrowing from the reserve. There is no longer any expectation that this will ever be paid back. The debt is really nothing more than a graph showing the expansion of the money supply, and the interest rate is nothing more than the vector of where the debt is going.
No obviously this isn’t a realistic policy - but if we can have “war-time” economies as proven in the past it reasons that we can have an economy solely focused on the repayment of debt (idk, high taxes for a decade?). Am I tripping?
Almost half of households have less than $1000 in savings. How are they making it through the whole year without income?
How are all the old people who live off social security making it without 5% of GDP set aside to finance their lives?
In these terms it seems quite manageable. My guess is that if it was an actual problem we would solve it. My guess is that it is mostly a talking point.
The US has managed to do that in the long term.
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/government-debt-t...
This has been growing faster than CBO projections, though obviously the last few years were unique (hopefully). Found a graph from the 2015 CBO report that is still in a wikipedia article that projected we'd be at about 75% debt/GDP now[1]. Another article from 2020 as pandemic aid spending was going out warned we could hit 106% by this year.
IIUC there's not a line that we must not cross, but the level, the rate, and the can-kicking on all this debt spending, and debt in general, worries me (even as someone who leans to the left and supports big government projects).
[1] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:FederalDebt1940to201...
There is no intended steady state. (Also, projections of government debt to size of the economy into the future fluctuate wildly based on current circumstances, because they almost never have a reasonable basis for predicting the combination of future economic conditions and future fiscal decisions.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=53wThFFuOqU
There's also probably substantial savings to be had by moving to a single payer healthcare system which I think we should expect in the coming decades - support creeps up every single year.
Essentially the auto companies need relief from the retirement plans to compete with countries with civilized policies.
The way congress works against the populous on this issue puts the individuals and the businesses at a disadvantage globally.
About half of the debt is to... the US government. And all of it is in US dollars, that the US government can print.
So the US could get out of debt tomorrow if they wanted, forgiving the loans it made to itself, and then printing enough to pay off the rest. Which presumably wouldn't impact its ability to lend money to itself.
The tough part for me to wrap my head around is why the debt is important at all, given the US is more or less fully in control of it.
Like, imagine you made up "hacker dollars", which you can make more of whenever you want. They're sticky notes with a number written on them.
Then you lent "hacker dollars" to yourself, at a 4% interest. So borrower you creates new "hacker dollars" to pay the lender you interest.
If you wanted, you could just say that you forgive the loan you made to yourself, and pay the "hacker dollars" directly.
If anything, it seems like a complex accounting system more than anything related to credit card debt or mortgages.
Another way of thinking about it is the US deficit is high because savings needs are also high. It isn't just a "we need to spend more money", it is also a "we need to borrow more money" (due to lots of savings demand). The problem is that we aren't using those savings needs productively enough, so we are still going to get hit in the future.
China also has a similar problem, but one could argue that they are leveraging savings needs effectively through lots of infrastructure and other capital projects. BUT Japan went that route as well, and it didn't work out too well for them.
A government can print more money to pay off that debt (causes inflation), it can lower interest rates on that debt (also causes inflation), cut costs (causes deflation but politically unpopular), or it can raise taxes (also causes deflation but politically unpopular). In the first two cases, the value of your savings diminishes.
Government debt is a byproduct of government spending. The primary purpose of government spending is to inject money into the economy, creating demand and stimulating economic activity. When the government spends more than it collects in taxes, it runs a deficit and issues debt as a way to accommodate the excess spending.
Taxes are thus a tool to manage inflation. By reducing the amount of money in circulation, taxes help prevent excessive demand that could lead to inflationary pressures.
(Modern Monetary Theory)
Not that I’m a doomer, just saying it is normal for people to project what will happen if nothing changes, even while we all know things will change.
So it wasn't actually the norm when Clinton tried to make a dent in the foreign debts of the US.
Modern economic theory says that there's a big difference between normal household finances and national economics.
Countries don't reach retirement age, they get new taxpayers every year. (Either through births or immigration).
So there's essentially no limit to how many times they can roll the debts over via issuing new state-backed bonds, except for how the market views the country's future prospects.
That's the theory, at least.
USA spends a huge portion of the money that it borrows on its military. If those countries ever want to "call" their money back then they will face USA's military if the negotiations deteriorate to that level.
That isn't true. US treasuring notes are in demand because they are incredibly reliable. The US doesn't default on them, so they are safe places to stash billions of dollars that you might not want floating around in your economy (which is why China is such an enthusiastic customer for US Treasuries).
> USA spends a huge portion of the money that it borrows on its military.
US spending on military is 3.1% of GDP, expected to go to 2.3% by 2033. The US is not borrowing from other economies to fund its military, they don't have to. If that number starts creeping up (like to say 10% of GDP), bad things will happen. But if other countries stop lending us money, we aren't really going to be in trouble at all (we just stop selling treasuries, our military is funded as a part of American production, it isn't using much production from China).
In comparison, China spends 2.7% of its GDP on its military, so not far off from the USA, although the PLA is sort of entangled in the private economy, so it isn't so clear.
I have an easy solution for bringing it down to any number you want: more government spending, the more wasteful the better.
You see, government spending is part of that ‘economic activity’ number. In fact, certain types of especially wasteful spending require purchases that guarantee it will count for double in that number. Of course this creates more debt, so every year you have to create enough money to increase your spending by a huge factor, but it works in the formula used here.
This is not a new idea; it was most recently popularized by an Obama economic plan to introduce stimulus on the same premise. And he’s right; spending does bring down the number temporarily. Is it insanity to believe that this represents an economic benefit? Well, you may recognize this response from Rick Santelli:
“You can’t buy your way into prosperity. And if the multiplier that all of these Washington economists are selling us is over one, then we never have to worry about the economy again. The government should spend a trillion dollars an hour because we’ll get $1.5 trillion back.”
Now as a historical exercise, I would like just one example of a long-term financially-responsible central government that had full control of the issuance of their own legal tender. I’m not suggesting a different system; I’m merely pointing out the possible futility of our expectations.