Interesting read...Tom Brown wrote: An interesting question from Cullen's favorite MMist (David Beckworth):
Has The Natural Interest Rate Has Been Negative for the Past Five Years?
http://macromarketmusings.blogspot.com/ ... -been.html
I've often thought about this. Many people often worry that the US is printing too much money and therefore will risk losing its role as a global reserve currency. But, a global reserve currency is created by foreign demand for that currency. And in order to meet that demand, there needs to be enough liquidity to supply that currency to the entire world — which would imply that a lot of printing is probably necessary to meet that demand.David Beckworth wrote:Population growth matters because it too affects the expected return to capital. More people means more workers and output per unit of capital. For example, the opening up of China and India's labor supply to the global economy, meant a higher expected return to the global stock of capital over the past decade. That should put upward pressure on interest rates and vice versa.
Source: http://macromarketmusings.blogspot.com/ ... -been.html
What are the various thoughts on that in the community you're tuned into?
 
				


 and I suppose at times they will hold US dollars in those cases as well, but it would likely need to be paper dollars (unless they had a foreign US account).
 and I suppose at times they will hold US dollars in those cases as well, but it would likely need to be paper dollars (unless they had a foreign US account). ), but they can't force the markets to value their currency a certain way against gold or other currencies.  They can't force people from engaging in commerce, "bidding up the price of assets."  They can't even really control interest rates on a micro scale.  I can loan money to whoever I want for whatever I want (given negotiation, and barring certain loan shark laws, obviously).  We aren't nearly as victimized as some feel we are. We have pretty abundant options.
), but they can't force the markets to value their currency a certain way against gold or other currencies.  They can't force people from engaging in commerce, "bidding up the price of assets."  They can't even really control interest rates on a micro scale.  I can loan money to whoever I want for whatever I want (given negotiation, and barring certain loan shark laws, obviously).  We aren't nearly as victimized as some feel we are. We have pretty abundant options.