neorichieb1971 wrote:One thing is for sure. You see that accounting and the man on the street cries. Why does he cry? Simply because if HE played God with money he would have done a much better job of spending it.
If everyone could create money there would be no money because it wouldn't be valuable. You need to have the ability to gain or lose it, meaning there has to be credits and debts, and there are no such things if everyone can just choose not to accept a currency(which they would certainly do if they're in debt) and create their own. There needs to enforcement of those credits/debts. That's the whole point of money, it's an agreed upon standard. It's agreed upon because there is some kind of authority backing it up. Without some kind of authority enforcing it, it's not agreed upon, and it's not valuable. Or to put it this way, no government = no money. If you want to argue against having money at all that's one thing, but all this stuff about government debt, the gold standard, or the collapse of the U.S. dollar are arguing a different point based on false premises.
Ed Oscuro wrote:Sorry, but could you clarify what this block of text was really in response to?
For the first quote you give, "lumping in private and public debt together" definitely was not my intention here (ironically I ran across the idea in gathering some quotes to post, but didn't feel it right to post). I didn't clarify this, but that private and public debts are separate naturally follows on from the point (discussed earlier, I think) that private and public debtors have different options available (the financial policy instruments available to a sovereign entity that aren't available to a private debtor).
Sorry that wall of text was an organizational mess. One was a very general point, namely you made a point that talked about two potential downsides to debt. Just in general, I don't think that's a very useful framework. Debt on a general, macro level tells you almost nothing. For an example, if the government decides it doesn't like to have debt over a certain level for an arbitrary reason, and cuts back, leading to declines in GDP(which have whatever impact you like for this example, loss of jobs etc.), you could say that's a potential downside of having a certain amount of debt.
But of course, the key variable is actually what the government chooses to do, the debt by itself doesn't matter. Here I'm talking about debt in a general sense, but if you wanted to focus on some kind of debt(debt a government owns in a foreign currency, government debt in its own currency, private debt of some kind, whatever) one could say a somewhat similar thing. You can come up with infinite downsides(or upsides for that matter) with debt so long as you don't specify what the other variables are. This is what I mean when I say "theories of debt" aren't particularly useful. Debt by itself doesn't really tell you much. I'm not merely pointing out the differences between public and private debt, and I'm not even saying debt particularly matters or doesn't matter, I'm going further and saying that debt levels in general are not a useful metric. They may have certain cases where they're useful, but talking about general impacts of debt, or even general impacts of public debt is a weird thing to do. It's a sort of obtuse and misleading way of asking what are the benefits to having money at all. So in other words, I don't agree that there are X number of downsides to debt.
The other stuff was about a particular case of Japan, where someone you quoted was talking about how what Japan has been doing is a different option from inflate or default, wherein they made two claims: 1. that central bank interest rates(and the supposed reduction in debt services the lowering of them brings) and the maintenance of debt as a way to maintain some sort of growth. I think this description is basically wrong. To elaborate on that(in a very unclear, wandering way) I first described why interest rates may not necessarily help matters(because reducing the debt burden for some is reducing the wealth of others, and since the government is the primary debtor, you're effectively taking money out of the economy in the form of reduction in interest payments), but was also getting at the idea that interest rates don't matter as much as people think.
There is this assumed relationship between interest rates and the behavior of the public, or interest rates and inflation/deflation, and I think this is basically wrong(there is incidentally little empirical basis for these claims in the first place). You could come up with imaginary extreme examples where interest levels change everything, but generally I don't think interest rates are that important, frankly. It's something that makes central bank advisors feel more important than they actually are. This may sound like a contradiction to the previous paragraph, but as I said in the last huge post that you're asking about, mostly changes in government interest rates do very little, what impact they have is comparatively small, but in that above paragraph(and in the other post) I explored some of what those small changes might be.
So that's about interest rates. As I said, the quote you posted about Japan said something about central bank interest rates and also about growing from maintaining the debt level. This second part about growth and debt, is true, but only in a trivial sense. That is, if you ignore trade, you can say that, all other things equal, if the government takes on more debt than that increases in relative terms the wealth of the private sector, and then you can also say that the economy tends to grow when the government spends more. But that's an elementary point, and it's a little misleading to say Japan was growing from maintaining debt because it implies that the debt level is the key variable. I gave an imaginary example where public debt might drop but the economy was doing better, at that sort of time period the economy would not be growing based on maintenance of the public debt but the economy was growing. So the point basically was, again, that debt is not the important variable.
Or more succinctly, all that stuff about interest rates and how they relate to debt or inflation is obfuscation and also misleading. All you need to know is that prices are not simply determined by how much money is created(they can be influenced in a number of different ways), that money is created by a government, that for every debt there's a credit, and that a government has the power to finance any amount of expenditure it wants. You don't need really to get into stuff like interest rates to point out why government debt is sustainable, that's really besides the point.
Ed Oscuro wrote:As for the rest, that inflation doesn't matter much is the point I've been trying to make for a while. Inflation has been one of the chief bogeymen of the right for a while now, apparently because of squeamishness about certain financial instruments on the one hand, and an intention of preserving the value of idle capital on the other (I'm sure there are other reasons, but jealousy of the government's ability to alter the value of a dollar does not suit those who feel better suited by a regime of dollar scarcity).
I wouldn't agree that inflation doesn't matter at all, although it's true there are elements which blow it way out of proportion. Also, it's not only the right who buys into inflation scares.