Bobby sold you the bonds because you were willing to pay him a tad over FMV to get them from him, and he knew he could go back and buy more bonds. You were helping him increase his financial position.Kshartle wrote:Then why did he sell me the bonds for cash? If he just wanted cash why didn't he sell them before I printed? The simple fact is more cash exists to bid up prices than before I printed it. It makes no difference what I choose to buy. The same amount of bonds exist alongside more cash. Do you think Bobby Bondholder is just going to bury his cash in the backyard and never spend it? What do you think he's going to do with it?!?!? Burn it?!?!?!moda0306 wrote: If you really promise to do asset swaps, and go out and buy a bunch of bonds from people, your only material affect on the economy will be on the bond market, lowering the yield, which MIGHT have a SMALL effect on people's propensity to save or consume. But sorry... Bobby Bondholder isn't going to go out and spend $1 Million all of a sudden because you took his bonds of his hands and gave him money.
I thought the point of the printing and the bond-buying was too stimulate demand for goods and services by debasing the currency and driving down yields to discourage savings?
You don't think driving up bond prices and drving down currency value causes some people to sell their bonds and "stimulate" demand? I thought that was the entire justification for the QE. Why else are they doing it?
Ahhhh but we've done this dance before.
If you take it to the extreme conclusion you can understand it better. Imagine I print enough money in my basement to buy up every outstanding dollar denominated debt in the entire world. Every single person who had a bond now has cash instead and I own every dollar denominated liability. What do you think would happen? The effect is identical even I just buy a tiny bit it's just much much smaller.
Bobby will eventually spend the cash after retiring his bond positions over time, as he decides to retire and spend down his bonds. This happens over a LONG period of time.
It is true that you have the ability to bid up prices with more cash, but if you choose to bid up the PRICE of a bond, we still haven't figured out what this means for goods and services... which is what people are trying to measure when they calculate inflation. If goods and services are not rising in cost, we probably wouldn't even measure inflation. Most people don't give two shits about what the bond market is doing until they either A) go to buy a home, or 2) retire. Since PEOPLE are what make up an economy, this is why we focus on goods and services rather than financial tools when looking at the price level.
Absolutely, driving up bond vales and yields down will have an effect on people's marginal propensity to spend or save. But it's nowhere near the top priority. Having the bond market yield a .5% less than it did yesterday does NOT fundamentally change much for most consumers. They're not going to all of a sudden buy a home they otherwise wouldn't have, or spend significantly more than they otherwise wouldn't have in retirement.
Further, let's not forget, like the Fed, you're not going to SPEND those bonds back into the economy (you promised!! And breaking a promise is a clear NAP violation
And this doesn't even deal with us in the real world that know that the fed has set unemployment/inflation targets that it is MANDATED to abide by, and that base money earns IoR, making it remarkably similar to a short-term bond anyway.
All this is why we don't see inflation even with huge "stimulus" from the fed, nor do we see high interest rates even with huge "stimulus" from the treasury via deficit spending. Like tech said, you can't just ignore the laws of economics simply because money printing is involved. I'm sure he didn't mean it the way I mean it, but he would if he was doing his economic analysis correctly.
Sorry for the hijack. Let's do this somewhere else. Perhaps after we've proven morality.

