Kshartle wrote:How can you guys possibly think the bank having bonds on it's balance sheet is the same as cash? The only thing it can buy with it's bonds is cash. (correct me if that's wrong please)
Kshartle, I don't know how else to say this, but the overwhelming majority of our economy's purchasing power is not denominated in cash. It just isn't.
Wikipedia.org wrote:Another measure of money, M0, is also used; unlike the other measures, it does not represent actual purchasing power by firms and households in the economy. M0 is base money, or the amount of money actually issued by the central bank of a country.
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money
Does that make sense to you, Kshartle?
M0 does not represent our purchasing power. It is nothing more than what the Fed uses for interbank transfers at the end of the business day, to settle up the change in deposits between banks. That's it!
If you increase the amount of M0 for interbank transfers, and you take away an equal amount of purchasing power from the private sector, the total purchasing power in the private sector DOES NOT CHANGE.
Kshartle wrote:What QE is, in effect, is an interest free loan to the government.
You are oversimplifying it. First of all, a fiat government is never rich or poor, so it really is just numbers in a computer from the government's perspective (i.e. it's a little silly to imagine a fiat government giving itself a free loan).
But, you're forgetting that the Fed does not purchase anything directly from the Treasury. The Primary Dealers buy the bonds
at auction — with its
own reserves from previous government spending.
That's what legally enables the government spending — but it's a bit of an illusion since the reserves created by previous government spending is what enables the Primary Dealers to buy those bonds at auction. The Fed purchasing the bonds
after the fact simply lets the government off the hook from having to make the interest payments that it has no trouble making. And truthfully, the banks would honestly rather have the bonds, since the bonds would give them more interest income on their reserves than IOR.
Kshartle wrote:Gumby loans him the other 2k per month needed to get by. He receives a note that promises repayment with interest...Every month I print 2k or slightly more and buy the note from Gumby...Gumby has as much money or possibly slightly more
I am no richer after the transaction because the extra money you gave me usually doesn't cover the lost interest income on that savings (plus I believe the tax rate on the sale is more than the tax rate on interest, in reality).
Kshartle wrote:MDRAF has 2k more which will be spent and bid up prices.
No, no. QE doesn't enable the government to spend that money. The bonds are purchased by the Fed from the Primary Dealers on the
Secondary Market. Sales on the Secondary Market do not have
any effect on the Treasury's ability to spend. You will miss this point if you try to oversimplify it.
And finally, the Fed could not monetize a bond if the bond did not exist in the first place. It's the net deposit of the bond in the private sector that enables the government to create its own currency.
Nothing I say should be construed as advice or expertise. I am only sharing opinions which may or may not be applicable in any given case.