Armed Polite Society

Main Forums => The Roundtable => Topic started by: grampster on June 14, 2012, 09:24:09 PM

Title: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: grampster on June 14, 2012, 09:24:09 PM
So, the national debt is 14 and some odd trillion dollars.  Here's the question.

What if the Treasury printed 15 trillion new dollars and paid off every single debt to every single person, foreign government and/or entity in full?

Now a couple of my comments to get the ball rolling:

After all, dollars are fiat dollars with nothing backing them except the full faith and credit of the United States which is governed by the people of the United States as set up by the Constitution.  So if the people are the government then the people of the U.S. are the backbone of the fiat U.S. dollar.  We are the value backing the dollar.  The people of the United States have shown themselves to be one of the most inventive, hard working, efficient etc etc populace in modern history.  So if the fiat dollar is based on the efficacy of Americans then nothing else could be a better backer of currency, even a lot of it.  The rest of the world has faith in the American people.

So now there are 15 trillion new dollars loose in the world.  What then?  Well some would say galloping inflation because demand and available dollars abound.  But aren't demand and available dollars a good thing in a free and capitalist society?  But what if at the same time those dollars paid off the national debt, Congress enacted wage and price controls?  Now that hasn't worked in the past some will say.  That's true.  But wage and price controls were knee jerk reactions AFTER a problem was in full bloom.  What if those controls were put in place to prevent unchecked inflation that has not occurred..say wages and prices can't increase by more than 5% per year for a set period of say 15 years after the debt is paid.   And what if America set about to create an elevated high speed electric rail system that follows the interstate highway rights of way as much as possible, at the same time as the above, throughout the entire country, along with feeder lines.  (The only criticism not allowed here is the lame tired one that Americans don't like trains and they will not use them.  Bushwah!! This is an entirely new concept and old thinking is not relevent regarding trains.)

Taxes would drop because there is no national debt interest and principal to be served.  That adds more dollars into the fray.  But it allows people with those dollars to invest in the private enterprise that ultimately builds, runs and maintains the rail system as well as all of the other types of industry, business and service that might begin to appear because of the available dollars and the pent up demand.  As for employment, every able bodied unemployed person, especially veterans, would have an opportunity to work on the rail system.  Able bodied people on welfare would be required to work after a period of time of weening and training.

OK.  Flame suit on.  Fire away.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: Perd Hapley on June 14, 2012, 09:34:50 PM
cool story bro
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: Balog on June 14, 2012, 09:34:52 PM
You are being sarcastic here, right?
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: Tallpine on June 14, 2012, 09:52:58 PM
My days of taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle ...
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: MicroBalrog on June 14, 2012, 10:09:55 PM
I .... seriously think that a default is a better idea than this.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: grampster on June 14, 2012, 10:13:57 PM
Heh. [popcorn]  C'mon, why is this a bad idea?  In addition look at all the cash that would be available to bail out Greece, France, California, New York and Spain.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: Regolith on June 14, 2012, 10:34:13 PM
Heh. [popcorn]  C'mon, why is this a bad idea?  In addition look at all the cash that would be available to bail out Greece, France, California, New York and Spain.

Combine the U.S. Great Depression with the Weimar Republic and that's just about what you'd have. The government could try just as hard as it could and it wouldn't stop hyperinflation, the demand for US dollars would actually FALL because they'd be worthless, and the price controls would bankrupt companies or severely restrict what they could make, and a makework program is just that: make work. It doesn't actually produce anything of value; the vast majority of passenger rail systems have completely and utterly failed to pay for themselves. You might as well hire people to dig holes and then fill them back in. So, massive layoffs, a steep falloff of any kind of production, the US would likely lose its credit rating anyway (other countries generally don't like being paid with worthless paper), people would have to go back to bartering because paper notes would be worth more as toilet paper, etc. etc.

Basically, you've taken every economic program that has not only failed to stimulate the economy but had the exact opposite effect (besides outright communism, anyway), and rolled it all into one package.  It'd be like a doctor prescribing a shotgun blast to the forehead as a cure for a broken leg.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: makattak on June 14, 2012, 11:25:05 PM
Aside from the other problems of black markets and other ways of cheating wage and price controls, how many products do you purchase for which every material comes from the United States?

Our imports would simply stop. Every person in this country would be SIGNIFICANTLY poorer. Transportation would effectively shut down (oil is, of course, significantly coming from overseas). Unless the government also forced every company to sell their materials only to Americans, most of the resources in the US would get exported. US workers would have their real wages cut, probably more than by half. Given how fast people would be trying to dump cash, I wouldn't be surprised if they dropped TO 10%.

Barter would be the main form of trade. (And barter is TERRIBLY inefficient.)

Also, the dollar would cease to be the reserve currency of the world which would further weaken our economy. Our military would likely starve (like all the rest of us poor saps) and that would mean the rising of one or more new dominant powers.

And this is but a cursory overview.

So, disaster, to put it mildly.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: Perd Hapley on June 15, 2012, 12:11:22 AM
So, grampster for Treasury Secretary, anyone?


No?  ???
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: zxcvbob on June 15, 2012, 12:18:16 AM
Y'all know that's what the Federal Reserve is doing already, right?  Just not doing it all in one step.  They are printing dollars out of thin air and buying US Treasury bonds with them.  It's called "monetizing the debt"  That's why the real inflation rate (as deduced from food, energy, and commodity prices) is so high while the official inflation rate (pulled out of the Treasury Secretary's backside) is so low.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: ArfinGreebly on June 15, 2012, 12:48:29 AM
I don't think this approach works.

It doesn't work for the same reason that counterfeiting doesn't work.

It doesn't work for the same reason that printing unsecured Federal Reserve Notes counterfeiting doesn't work.

(There is an actual physics to economics.  I've got a writeup somewhere that I did in another [related] discussion.  I will not attempt to reproduce it here.)

An economy requires balanced exchange.  Mountains of money far exceeding production is not balanced exchange.

Value -- real value -- is a function of production.  In the absence of production, "value" is a fraud.

I'm sure I could construct a long-winded argument for this, but I think the effort would be pointless.  It wouldn't be needed for some, and wouldn't be convincing for the rest.

Money isn't value, it's value tokens.  Production, the actual "energy" of the system, is value.

When production value grossly exceeds the representative token "value" there is waste.

When the token "value" representation grossly exceeds the real production, there is fraud.  "Inflation" if you prefer.  No amount of rule making will prevent the inevitable scarcities created by illicit markets or financial "workarounds."

And "fooling" the system with a "shock treatment" of scads of currency doesn't fool the physics of the system:  eventually the system will seek balance, and physics will have its due.

Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: Balog on June 15, 2012, 01:23:27 AM
No, but seriously you're Modest Proposal'ing us here, right?
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: vaskidmark on June 15, 2012, 06:53:41 AM
Grampster -

It sounds like you forgot to take one or more of your meds.  Either that or the results of drinking out of that aluminum canteen cup all those years have finally arrived.

I'm a dummy but immediately recognized the Weimar Republic similarities.  And I've seen the results of that fiasco episode personally!  (My grandfather was returning from Germany after a business trip and still had a (as in one (1)) $10 Silver Certificate in his wallet.  He could not board the boat until he converted US hard currency to local paper.  He needed two large wicker hampers to hold the bits of paper he received in "exchange" for that sole $10 bill.  When he returned home he used that paper to wallpaper the bedroom of the two young children who turned out to be my father and my uncle.  Having to grow up in a bedroom papered in worthless Weimar funny money may explain why and how my father and his brother turned out as adults. [tinfoil]  I recall a few nights I stayed at my grandparents' apartment while Mom & Dad were out.  I slept (very fitfully) in that bedroom which still had the Weimar wallpaper - scary dreams were most of what I remember about sleeping over at my grandparents'.

Thanks, but I do not want to go through that again.

stay safe.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: RoadKingLarry on June 15, 2012, 08:19:27 AM
From what I've been hearing on the news this morning we might get to see just how such a scheme will work in the Euro-zone just pretty soon.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: grampster on June 15, 2012, 08:38:37 AM
You see what boredom does when its late at night, one has had a afternoon nap, is not sleepy? :angel: =D
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: makattak on June 15, 2012, 08:44:02 AM
Ah, yes. More disaster came to mind.

I didn't even mention the total collapse of all finance as everyone either runs to the bank or simply spends EVERY SINGLE DIME IN THEIR BANK ACCOUNTS on hard assets as soon as this scheme is discovered.

Ever see "It's a Wonderful Life"? Now try that scene, but no one actually in the bank (ok it was technically a "building and loan", but it was a bank.)

Every bank in the United States would collapse. Hey, but fortunately, the government could just print more money to cover all the deposits lost! And, with everything else that is screwed up, it probably couldn't make it any worse! (Of course, it also would do absolutely nothing to make it better, either.)

So, no investment happening, no trade (in dollars) happening, significant black markets, corruption, bribery, starvation, and I will bet rioting and theft and violence.

Hmmm... what does that situation sound like?
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: seeker_two on June 15, 2012, 11:31:03 AM
grampster's plan could work.....as long as we invaded Poland & France afterwards....
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: makattak on June 15, 2012, 01:07:28 PM
grampster's plan could work.....as long as we invaded Poland & France afterwards....


Clearly we need to learn from the mistakes of the past.






 

Start with Russia, then work your way to Europe.
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: Jamie B on June 15, 2012, 06:20:39 PM
grampster's plan could work.....as long as we invaded Poland & France afterwards....


Let's invade a country that actually has something useable......
Title: Re: A question, then hopefully a discussion.
Post by: French G. on June 15, 2012, 06:54:35 PM
Has not been exposed to Polish women or food I see.