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So in other words you are making a baseless assertion. If what you are saying made sense how would you explain explosive growth in debt to GDP ratios in the majority of countries in the world over the past 40 years?Numerical proof of the argument is just common sense,
So in Venezuela or Weimar Germany or Zimbabwe when the velocity of money went through the roof as everyone tried to get rid of their rapidly depreciating fiat as quickly as possible did that stop output from dropping?Yes the out put of the economy may drop, but it may not, if the velocity of money increases.
Mate the Total growth in debt each year, is way less than the total GDP, and as I said not all debt is bad and unsustainable so only part of that debt growth would be from debt that could be argued as bad, not to mention that as I also mentioned at least part of that debt would be funded by people that are forgoing their own ability to consume so the can save.So in other words you are making a baseless assertion. If what you are saying made sense how would you explain explosive growth in debt to GDP ratios in the majority of countries in the world over the past 40 years?
By the way the debt explosion kicked into overdrive when the U.S. dollar removed its final linkage to gold under president Nickson. Which is far from a coincidence.
In those situations the currency was destroyed, but I don't think it meant less bread was baked each day, or forests of timber slowed their growth in fact people in hyper inflation settings normally increase consumption, eg if I thought the price of coke was going to double next month due to the currency value dropping I might buy more coke now, along with all sorts of other consumer goods and services.So in Venezuela or Weimar Germany or Zimbabwe when the velocity of money went through the roof as everyone tried to get rid of their rapidly depreciating fiat as quickly as possible did that stop output from dropping?
(output as measured in terms of physical volume of goods produced etc)
What you are saying is nonsensical.
What you are saying total nonsense. Sure over a very short time frame (maybe 6 - 12 months) consumption increases as people rush to spend their currency before it becomes worthless. But over a period of years consumption will drop greatly because people's purchasing power gets destroyed. Do you think in Venezuela people eat more steaks today then they did 20 years ago? I can assure you the answer is they consume less steaks because most of them cannot afford steak any more!In those situations the currency was destroyed, but I don't think it meant less bread was baked each day, or forests of timber slowed their growth in fact people in hyper inflation settings normally increase consumption, eg if I thought the price of coke was going to double next month due to the currency value dropping I might buy more coke now, along with all sorts of other consumer goods and services.
A currency rapidly devaluing is disruptive, but it doesn't change the underlying value of things in real terms.
Or a simple easy to understand fact:What you are saying total nonsense. Sure over a very short time frame (maybe 6 - 12 months) consumption increases as people rush to spend their currency before it becomes worthless. But over a period of years consumption will drop greatly because people's purchasing power gets destroyed. Do you think in Venezuela people eat more steaks today then they did 20 years ago? I can assure you the answer is they consume less steaks because most of them cannot afford steak any more!
Your argument that currency devaluation doesn't change the underlying value of things is bogus. There is a link between the monetary world and the real economy. Sure if a factory exists just because the factory owners defaulted on the debt or the currency hyper-inflates it doesn't mean the building disappears but the factory may sit idle/vacant due to a weak economy caused by said debt defaults or hyper-inflation. An idle/vacant factory is worth less than a productive factory. A lot of homes in Venezuela today when measured in US dollars are selling for a fraction of the price they were selling for 20 years ago because they produce far less rent than they did 20 years ago (when measured in U.S. dollars).
At this point its clear you either don't understand second order economic effects or you are arguing in bad faith.
That chart proves my point.
Before the houses in Detroit were abandoned, they were lived in and consumed for years, they served their purpose. Just like a loaf of bread has value, that disappears as it is consumed, so do houses they just are consumed over a much longer time frame.Or a simple easy to understand fact:
The house owners default, the house get on market via morgage sale, are boarded up, squatters set in: within a decade.. Detroit, housing areas in europe, the houses are destroyed, unmaintained infrastructure collapses and only the raw land, now in no go area is left as "value" for maybe a recycling plant or a heavy machinery parking area, there is actual destruction of assets, output not only $ value.
8 years is not enough time when looking at long term trends for the global economy. Pay attention to the the long term chart starting from 1950. Also your maths is not adding up. The chart showed that debt rose from $221 trillion to $315 trillion in 8 years. That is $94 trillion increase in 8 years which is an $11.75 trillion increase in debt per annum. I don't know where you are getting the less than $10 trillion per year figure from.Over 8 years global debt rose by less than $10 Trillion per year, but the Global GDP was over $100 Trillion per year, so clear most GDP is not coming from debt.
1. Even if debt stayed the same in real terms, that chart would show $6 Trillion increase each year just from inflation.
2. The global economy grew over that time, so you would expect debt to grow as the economy grows, this is probably atleast another $3 Trillion per year.
Ok, well you find me a time when global debt has ever increased at a rate that is anywhere close to global GDP.8 years is not enough time when looking at long term trends for the global economy. Pay attention to the the long term chart starting from 1950. Also your maths is not adding up. The chart showed that debt rose from $221 trillion to $315 trillion in 8 years. That is $94 trillion increase in 8 years which is an $11.75 trillion increase in debt per annum. I don't know where you are getting the less than $10 trillion per year figure from.
You clearly do not understand the charts or basic mathematics because they are highlighting debt to GDP ratio not the nominal level of debt. Therefore if inflation boosted GDP and debt at the same rate then the debt to GDP ratio would remain the same but it did not remain the same it increased significantly since 1950.
There is no point arguing with you if you are going to continue to be intellectually dishonest and argue in bad faith.
Some of that interest it pays it pays to itself, for example the federal reserve is a huge holder of government bonds, and its returns its profit each year back to the treasury.In the U.S.A the government paying interest on the debt it owes is the second biggest line item in terms of expenditure and its projected to become the number 1 line item for expenditure within the next 5 - 10 years. But according to you that is a sustainable trajectory when a government spend more on paying the interest on its debts than it does on any other line item such as healthcare, social security, infrastructure investment, etc.
an interesting concept when you dwell on it ( especially at US Federal and State Government departments )Also, other government organisations often hold USA treasury bonds
Yep plenty of examples of towns where whatever industry that brought money in died out.Or a simple easy to understand fact:
The house owners default, the house get on market via morgage sale, are boarded up, squatters set in: within a decade.. Detroit, housing areas in europe, the houses are destroyed, unmaintained infrastructure collapses and only the raw land, now in no go area is left as "value" for maybe a recycling plant or a heavy machinery parking area, there is actual destruction of assets, output not only $ value.
What on earth are you talking about? You are comparing apples to oranges. You need to compare total debt to total GDP and total debt growth to total GDP growth otherwise it makes no sense. You are trying to compare total GDP to the individual annual increase in debt which is a useless and nonsensical comparison.Ok, well you find me a time when global debt has ever increased at a rate that is anywhere close to global GDP.
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