68Camaro wrote:An ability to expand money supply by just saying "make it so" does allow TPTB to react to flash blips in markets. If/when they release that created "money" out into commerce, they have just inflated costs and devalued your savings. But the 2008 TARP (and follow-on even larger electronic backstops, some of which they haven't talked about much) didn't create the inflation that some of us (like myself, who was still being educated in modern money flow) thought would happen, as fast as we thought, because most of it never flowed out past the banks - rather it just covered bank losses from their bad investments in mortgages and derivatives. Some of that electronic money printing is seeping out and we are seeing some higher inflation, but still most of it just went on the books and stayed there (for now).
They can't do this perpetually, at large volume. But they can and have done this for now, in the hopes that no one will notice over the span of time they are doing this such that various executives can use it to their advantage to get rich and exit the markets. However I believe that they have let the genie out of the bottle - human nature can't be caged for long - successive generations of decision makers will now continue to go back to this approach under the theory that their predecessors got away with it, so why can't they do the same thing. Greed is a powerful, powerful motivator for these people, especially when they believe they won't be caught. So they will go back to it one more time. And one more time. And again. Eventually this mounting debt will collapse under its own weight. When? When - while markets are still somewhat free - enough people lose confidence.
rainsonme wrote: A completely controlled economy. This could work out ok ----
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Recyclersteve wrote:rainsonme wrote: A completely controlled economy. This could work out ok ----
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What happens if people cannot access the internet or if (due to massive ID theft) your bank/brokerage accounts suddenly go to zero. In the case of accounts going to zero on a widespread basis, even FDIC/SIPC insurance wouldn't be sufficient for all the claims. You could try filing a claim and the insurance company would declare "force majeure" (something so widespread and massive that insurance (and even reinsurance) would not be able to cover it). What do you do then?
beauanderos wrote:Recyclersteve wrote:rainsonme wrote: A completely controlled economy. This could work out ok ----
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What happens if people cannot access the internet or if (due to massive ID theft) your bank/brokerage accounts suddenly go to zero. In the case of accounts going to zero on a widespread basis, even FDIC/SIPC insurance wouldn't be sufficient for all the claims. You could try filing a claim and the insurance company would declare "force majeure" (something so widespread and massive that insurance (and even reinsurance) would not be able to cover it). What do you do then?
FDIC is a joke. If you think you're covered... think again. 32 billion of insurance against the potential of 6 trillion in claims. Only the naive continue to have trust in banks nowadays.
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