hoost wrote:
Gumby wrote:
If you can grasp the idea that Treasuries represent our private sector's savings (they certainly represent MY savings) then it becomes clear that the Fed doesn't really have the power to create much inflation — other than making an environment that's more favorable to private credit creation.
Gumby wrote:
I'm all for a smaller government, but the private sector's savings (i.e. Treasuries) come from government spending. People who say we need to save more and have the government spend less are talking out of both sides of their mouth.
It still seems to me that you are suggesting that the government creates wealth by spending money into existence. I don't understand that. As I understand it, the government can only transfer wealth. It doesn't make the pizza bigger, it just changes the size and distribution of the slices.
As an Austrian, I used to believe this too. The key thing to understand is that going off the gold standard broke many of the monetary rules that traditional Austrian economics relies on. The government is not able to create real wealth (it is a parasite after all), but it is able to create money that is more stable than private credit. In a world where the currency is not backed by anything other than promises, it's better to have it backed by the promises of a sane government than by the promises of a corrupt, virtually-nationalized banking industry.
However, this whole new monetary system ceases to work the more insane the government is. When the government creates dramatically more money than there is real wealth in the private sector, or when the government actively harms the private sector and destroys real wealth, then you have a recipe for social misery and hyperinflation e.g. Zimbabwe.
The big problem with MMR in my eyes is that by adopting the whole "governments
ought to do X" fallacy, it does not acknowledge just how insane most governments
actually behave. The Governments of the United States, Japan, the UK, etc. are, despite their flaws, shining exceptions in a world full of dramatically worse governments populated mostly by thugs and killers who view their posts as protected positions from which to steal and murder. I have lived in an African country where this was very much the case for example, with police and soldiers being indistinguishable from organized crime. The government systematically oppressed the weak at every turn and confiscated as much of the private sector's wealth as it could, funneling the money into purchasing arms to fight off revolutionaries and rebels and further oppress the people.
I worry that MMR requires governments to fundamentally behave in a manner contrary with their existence, and that this will eventually be the doom of this fragile monetary system that is based on promises of promises and expectations of government wisdom and competence.
Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan