Which is worse, government “printing” money or government “borrowing” money?
In an Objectivist society, the government under normal circumstances would neither print nor borrow money. My question is: In today’s deficit-ridden economy, is it less destructive for the government to finance that deficit by issuing unbacked currency directly or to continue its existing policy of issuing bonds? Two advantages I can see in favor of money printing are that it would not involve debt (thus no interest payments), and would not require the participation (or even the existence) of a central bank.
Milton Friedman appears to have preferred direct money creation over debt financing.
http://0055d26.netsolhost.com/friedma...
Thoughts?
Milton Friedman appears to have preferred direct money creation over debt financing.
http://0055d26.netsolhost.com/friedma...
Thoughts?
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Besides, the national debt is already well above the point that anyone could honestly expect it will ever be paid back. So additional borrowing now just means more names get added to the end of a long list who may someday get an unexpected windfall, but more likely will be left holding the bag when the ability to borrow more runs out. As it must, because the expansion of the debt (and especially Social Security and Medicare which aren't included in the official debt number) makes it a pyramid scheme.
If we were having this conversation back in the Reagan era, it might still be possible to repay the whole debt through such means as auctioning off all the federal land in the West, which ought to be divested anyway for multiple reasons. But now, I don't believe repayment is possible at all, which leaves the choices of inflate it away, or repudiate it as Cuba did. Of those two, I'd rather inflate. That way the last lenders at least get something. (Besides which, the 14th Amendment, Section 4 appears to forbid repudiating.)
"money that is legally valid for the payment of debts and that must be accepted for that purpose when offered" https://www.merriam-webster.com/dicti...
I do have to object to the stock market claim, however. Investment actually does have to come from savings and not credit. One can not invest what they do not already have. Much of the 1929 Stock Market fall came because of speculation - and when those speculations failed the creditors were left high and dry and went under. It is also one of the primary dangers of our current banking system for the same reason: that banks are only required to actually keep a small fraction (5-10% I think - please correct me) of their reserves - the rest they can speculate with. That's why bank runs are also so dangerous: because it becomes a first-to-withdraw panic.
I would also point out that eventually credit runs out - even for nation-states. We are the most over-leveraged nation in the world presently between our massive government debt and our out-of-control consumer debt. That is not investment, but slavery. One is selling one's own future when speculating with credit.
This is the dirty little secret that the Central Banks have and that governments love. Welcome to the wonderful world of Keynesian philosophy......
"Today the legal tender law in the US is 35 USC § 5103 which states:
United States coins and currency (including Federal reserve notes and circulating notes of Federal reserve banks and national banks) are legal tender for all debts, public charges, taxes, and dues. Foreign gold or silver coins are not legal tender for debts.
Why legal tender laws do not require government monopolies on money absolutely, they are almost always used for that eventually. You just wrong that any Legal Tender law is consistent with Objectivism..
Nothing new, but that doesn't make it a good idea.
Disney is a private corporation, and “Disney Dollars” are an obligation for Disney to provide goods or services to the bearer. By contrast, “money” issued by a government is an obligation for that government to provide . . . what?
The government can certainly issue its own money, just as Disney does.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disney_...
Why not?
A couple of incidents and opportunities turned my head and I joined the ANA and began researching and writing. Selling articles was easy enough. One of them garnered an award nomination from a Smithsonian curator for correcting the Encyclopedia Britannica. But it has been learning experience all the way. My first interests were Mercury Dimes. I spent a lot of time (and money) on ancient Greeks. I just edited a chapter for a book about US Obsolete ("wild cat") paper money.
My point is that I have been learning the facts of economic history from the numismatic evidence.
Allow me to suggest that you accepted the teachings of conservative polemicists about "fiat" and "legal tender" - as did I; as do we all. Once you dive into the history, you find a different story. The truths are the same. Truth is eternal. That's what truth is. But the narratives are arguable.
In Human Action von Mises said that advocates of the free market and advocates of socialism agree on the facts: a certain commodity had a certain price in a place and at a time. What they argue about is what it means.
Let me offer this: Legal tender is not a government monopoly on money. Legal tender is only a government declaration that this gold coin or slip of paper is money, as opposed to being, a medal, commendation, or award, or being a description, contract, or a resolution.
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