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Banks don't create money. Clients put money in banks which they then lend out. The only exception is the federal banks of many countries, which control the national treasuries generally. Bank of America, for example, can't create money.Licho wrote:Meh can anyone explain to me why banks create money, lend it to governments who become indepted?
I know it was setup to combat inflation but thats stupid, state should be able to avoid debtrap, if it needs to, by printing money (getting them from central bank).
Surely minor inflation is better than debt spriral of doom which depresses economy and hurts people.
Oh they do. Fictional money though. 0's and 1's. If everyone were to get all his/her money out of the bank right now, nearly none of the people would get it.SwiftSpear wrote:Banks don't create money. Clients put money in banks which they then lend out. The only exception is the federal banks of many countries, which control the national treasuries generally. Bank of America, for example, can't create money.Licho wrote:Meh can anyone explain to me why banks create money, lend it to governments who become indepted?
I know it was setup to combat inflation but thats stupid, state should be able to avoid debtrap, if it needs to, by printing money (getting them from central bank).
Surely minor inflation is better than debt spriral of doom which depresses economy and hurts people.
^^ ThisBaNa wrote:Thanks for the laugh OP
I like this. Nice quoteVelvetClaw wrote:The moral of the story is this: make hay while the sun shines, and always save for a rainy day. Good times don't last forever.
Indeed, Smoth. But you see the problem about Europe (from what I see as an outsider) is that they often prefer to "dunk the rich" as opposed to finding ways to compelling the rich to work for them, either by making people richer (through investment) or by making "loopholes" that benefit them in the short run but in fact benefit them over the long run.smoth wrote:I like this. Nice quoteVelvetClaw wrote:The moral of the story is this: make hay while the sun shines, and always save for a rainy day. Good times don't last forever.
Last time I checked on that, a lot of Brits told me that when Thatcher "sold off the family silver", a lot of people bought over the stocks and shares, and simply speculated in them.scifi wrote:And the irony is, we are liberalizing everything, instead of selling to different parties no we are creating a private Haven. Where 1 single private company has the rights to explore a given sector.
Where are you from specifically? I don't know many Asian countries that are models of democracy.VelvetClaw wrote:but then again we Asians have no living memory of fascist rule.