Gumby wrote:
Obviously a country like Greece certainly needs to work towards a surplus, so that it has reserves and doesn't run out of money during downturns or by overspending. But, I'm not sure I see how a surplus would actually help the United States when money can be created with a few keystrokes on a computer screen at any time.
Note that I'm not saying that we should spend with reckless abandon. I'm just saying that a surplus seems like it wouldn't do anybody any good in a fiat economy.
Gumby, you make some really great points, and I would tend to agree that running mild deficits by a country with their own currency (especially the world reserve currency) is usually helpful to the economy.
In the context of the debt ceiling debate, a lot of rhetoric on both sides has been flung around, like some tea party suggestions that any amount the debt ceiling is raised must be cut from future budgets.
If we look at cause/effect, severely cutting government spending in the midst of a bad economic environment when private spending is already low might just make things worse.
But, I would much rather see the spending going to infrastructure like roads, trains, and schools instead of minting coins to store in a vault somewhere. Just like the example of digging a canal with spoons instead of shovels or bulldozers. Sure, it creates jobs, but if we're going to use government cheese let's at least do it intelligently, where more people will benefit, rather than just digging holes to fill them back in again.
"I came here for financial advice, but I've ended up with a bunch of shave soaps and apparently am about to start eating sardines. Not that I'm complaining, of course." -ZedThou