11/23/2011 12:14:54 PM
11/23/2011 3:57:35 PM
11/23/2011 5:03:19 PM
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/12/debasing-the-dollar-not/
12/13/2011 5:23:41 PM
^ I guess you and Krugman have not been up on current events. It has been in all the news. The Federal Reserve conjured $7.8 trillion out of thin air and questionably loaned it to institutions that didn't need it. As classical a definition of debasing as I've ever heard. That such behavior has so far not resulted in hyper-inflation does not negate the behavior, as neither Ryan nor the Federal Reserve could have know at the time that Obama would purposefully drag on the depression for this long.
12/13/2011 6:36:06 PM
12/13/2011 9:09:03 PM
The U.S. banking system as a whole has loaned out something like ten times GDP. So, yes, if the Fed wanted to loan out a measily 50% of GDP it would not be difficult. The Fed's assets were not large enough to cover all its lending. Here is a graph of the Fed's balance sheet: So, yes, reading the graph it seems the Fed only created around $1.3 trillion in new currency from thin air which it proceeded to loan in and out of various institutions. Of course, this data is old, only containing information from the public record of the time. We really have no idea how much they printed in total, as until Ron Paul manages to arrange an audit, there are several massive programs we know existed but are not reported.
12/14/2011 12:43:00 AM
Krugman is a stooge. At the time Ryan made those comments the CRB index was up like 20 or 30% thanks to QE2. It continued to go up and since they never unleashed QE3 the effects of 2 wore off and now we're getting deflation again. I'd expect this to run until sometime next year when the depression talk will get cranked up again and they'll fire QE3 in re-igniting commodity prices and kicking off new inflation.
12/14/2011 6:56:17 AM
Lol.
12/15/2011 11:06:03 AM
12/15/2011 11:08:00 AM
^ Terminology. The Fed created $7 Trillion electronic dollars over time and destroyed it whenever it got paid back. The Fed doesn't create money, lend it out, then put it back in the electronic vault to lend out again later. It presses delete and conjures it up again later when it wants to. But you failed even on this, as just three posts above you I said that at any one time it was as low as $1.3 Trillion given old disclosed information. What I want to know is why you have chosen this as your position. There is no question this behavior is debasing the currency. That it has not debased it a whole lot is a defensible position. That debasing the currency at a time like this is a good idea is a position I'd agree with. That they should have lent that currency to this group of crony capitalists is highly questionable. That you are better than us because we repeated numbers which are arguably true is not reasonable.
12/15/2011 11:41:50 AM
I'm completely fine loaning it out to banks if it keeps the economy afloat rather than fuck over the millions who would suffer as collateral damage, but not as a matter of ongoing policy. As with TARP, such actions should be followed by breaking up those banks, and putting limits in place to stop the growth of any single finance institution to the point where it can have such profound effects on the economy as a whole without some sort of democratic oversight (Such as the appointed chairmen of the Fed board).[Edited on December 15, 2011 at 11:50 AM. Reason : .]
12/15/2011 11:47:44 AM
Boone's analogy isn't even fully correct. It's more like I give you a $10 loan for one day, then extend that loan tomorrow, and the day after, and the day after. How much did I loan you after a year? $10, or $3650?
12/15/2011 11:49:57 AM
^ Bernanke's own position is $1.2 Trillion, which is not 1/365 of the other figure. That the borrowers managed to profit $13 billion off the spread strongly implies the loans were for way more than 24 hours. Which is an estimate, I guess. But the graph I posted takes that into account and shows a daily balance sheet about $1.3 Trillion which clearly came from the presses. ^^ Hence the disagreement. I don't believe the institutions are large enough to "have such profound effects on the economy". We bailed them out because they wanted to be bailed out. You and Congress drank the Koolaid and they profited billions off the millions of people you were so eager to protect.[Edited on December 15, 2011 at 12:09 PM. Reason : ,.,]
12/15/2011 12:08:17 PM
12/15/2011 12:46:44 PM
12/15/2011 5:10:44 PM
12/15/2011 5:19:18 PM