Copperclad
Member
- Location
- Merritt Island, FL USA
We would be just fine if everyone that owes us money would just pay us!
This IMO is something that will have to change and move to a stagnet capacity instead of an increasing one.Through history, productive capacity is always indelibly increasing, uptrending.
The gov debt is bought by banks. The banks borrow from the federal reserve at the lower short term bill rate to buy this debt, and are paid interest by the treasury at the higher longer term note or bond rate. This passive unearned income is called "bank rebuilding of their balance sheet". The banks make the spread between the short and long term rate, the positive slope of the yield curve.
I think the answer is that there is no easy solution. Government at all levels has expanded itself to the point where it is unsustainable except through massive borrowing, that will just make the thing worse long term.
people should have realized that when a couple making $100,000 thought a $500,000 house was a bargain, and somehow managed to get a mortgage for it that something was really off.
if you want a long painful solution, look to the public sector initiatives taken during the Depression that just drew out the Depression and made it worse. so far that is the tactic that is being tried. it does not bode well for us.
OTOH, no voter will vote for pain for themselves. They want the pain to be for someone else.
basically we have borrowed to the point where there is nothing backing the loans anymore. the only thing holding it together at all is that there is nowhere for the holders of the debt to go that is any better.
OTOH, no voter will vote for pain for themselves. They want the pain to be for someone else.
Its better than the crud we hear on Fox.
I had someone tell me a couple of years ago when all this was a big red out of control truck coming down the mountain road that Keynesian economics was crud and that everything should be based on cash. When the banks thought credit card debt was equivalent to a mortgage. BANKS! The people that know how cash and credit work. Not to mix metaphors but, this train wreck has been looming and festering for years. Why is everyone so surprised by the big logo emblazoned backward on our chests from getting run over? Why isn't the government saying the obvious? That this policy was a mistake driven by politics and backed by ?????
Thats the $64,000 question. Personally I'm in favor of show trials.
In the mean time Ive heard that one third of the layoffs are from construction. That is a dead sector of the economy that isn't going anywhere. How do they keep people from rioting in the streets and steeling copper from abandoned buildings? (put that in so post would not get shut down) We need more bread and circuses. We need a goal. The moon, speed rail, a giant super colider, something that will keep us busy, promote jobs and skills, give people pride in themselves.
The moon race created jobs for many years, so the question is would an Energy race to become independent, and allow us to grow new industries and jobs
+1.I don't believe solar and wind power can be economical or reliable enough to solve the coming energy shortages.
Most of the hydro power that can be economically used is already in use. There are a few rivers that could be dammed here and there, but the problem is that when you damn a river up, it backs up where people live. That makes it extremely expensive to do because you have to buy that property.I firmly believe we should look into expanding hydroelectric at the expense of some fish.
If you have the leisure time and 50 bucks to spend, this is where you want to spend it. I spent a lot of time looking for the answers to my questions. it took a long time but the answers were in a history book:
http://www.amazon.com/Tragedy-Hope-...=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1260821842&sr=8-1
Inflation and deflation:
In times of surplus, the excess productive capacity negatively impacts pricing power of the producers. Prices fall to the liquidating (firesale) level. Weaker, less efficient or heavily indebted, competitors have their productive capacity forced from the market until the balance between demand and output of goods offered for sale is reestablished.
In times of shortage, pricing power shifts to the producer and prices are set to yield a profit. In extreme shortage or market imbalance, producers name their prices and the demand waits in line to receive and pay.
It's counterintuitive. Good times (times of plenty) suck for the producer because the excess productive capacity relative to demand negatively impacts pricing power and profitability.
Bad times (times of shortage, rationing) are great for the producer. Name your price, obscenely if necessary.
Through history, productive capacity is always indelibly increasing, uptrending. This is due to a larger workforce, per unit improvements labor productivity, better tools and methods, replacement of labor with capital equipment, better flow of information and resource assignment, larger more efficient productive capacity, advances in technology.
In order for goods to be bought there has to be money in circulation to buy. If the quantity of goods offered for sale is always increasing, the quantity of money in circulation must also increase.
This is why, historically, sea shells, dung chips, beads, have been used for money. Money is a basic essential need for human transaction to take place. This need will be met, one way or the other.
This knowledge has been known for thousands of years. This is why all major religions prohibit and punish usury in their bibles. Charging of interest on money forces productive human capacity off the market and forces involuntarily, by coercion, transfer of indebted productive capacity from the producer to the lender.
If you understand the phrase "bank rebuilding of their balance sheet" you would understand the above intuitively. There's an earth sized difference between printing money with the theories of say Stephen Zarlenga or Michael Hudson, and the current system where money is created by the act of borrowing.
When private sector borrowing is insufficient in strength, to grow the money supply at a rate that keeps pace with the increasing quantity, the government acts as "borrower of last resort". Government deficit spending is used to grow indebtedness, which grows the money supply, which grows demand for the output of goods offered for sale.
The gov debt is bought by banks. The banks borrow from the federal reserve at the lower short term bill rate to buy this debt, and are paid interest by the treasury at the higher longer term note or bond rate. This passive unearned income is called "bank rebuilding of their balance sheet". The banks make the spread between the short and long term rate, the positive slope of the yield curve.
War is predictable for the economic reasons. I'm sure my opinion on this is unpopular.
Thats the $64,000 question.
I think the most sustainable would be hydrogen energy production.