Lemon Thrower wrote:what does "liquidate debt" and "strategic currency floats" mean?
re debt, there are finite alternatives. either you default in full or part, or repay in full in part.
In bankruptcy, you declare a default and then come up with a way to treat everyone fairly based on their position (not necessarily equally - secured lenders get more). then you pay folks in part, and the rest of the debt is discharged (destroyed).
repaying in full by printing money means you devalue the currency in a massive, potentially destabilizing shock. worse, other countries will follow suit. instead, they are doing this in slow motion.
an honest way to do this would be to say that the dollar is revalued against gold. According to JIm Rickards, assumign the US owns in full the gold it claims to own, we can balance our on-budget liabilities by revaluing gold to about $15,000 an ounce. the USGov could just say its a buyer of gold at 99% of $15,000, and a seller at 101% of $15,000. Overnight, gold would go to $15,000 and our debt could be repaid fairly.
ultimately, the problems stem from the fact that we are using debt as money, that there are no effective limits on debt creation, and the destruction of debt in such a system is destabilizing.
Lemon Thrower wrote:what does "liquidate debt" and "strategic currency floats" mean?
re debt, there are finite alternatives. either you default in full or part, or repay in full in part.
In bankruptcy, you declare a default and then come up with a way to treat everyone fairly based on their position (not necessarily equally - secured lenders get more). then you pay folks in part, and the rest of the debt is discharged (destroyed).
repaying in full by printing money means you devalue the currency in a massive, potentially destabilizing shock. worse, other countries will follow suit. instead, they are doing this in slow motion.
an honest way to do this would be to say that the dollar is revalued against gold. According to JIm Rickards, assumign the US owns in full the gold it claims to own, we can balance our on-budget liabilities by revaluing gold to about $15,000 an ounce. the USGov could just say its a buyer of gold at 99% of $15,000, and a seller at 101% of $15,000. Overnight, gold would go to $15,000 and our debt could be repaid fairly.
ultimately, the problems stem from the fact that we are using debt as money, that there are no effective limits on debt creation, and the destruction of debt in such a system is destabilizing.
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