Pointedstick wrote:
Libertarian666 wrote:
Xan wrote:
States are currency users. The federal government is a currency issuer. Huge difference.
Yes, the difference is that a currency issuer can keep going further into debt until they make the currency worthless and wipe out everyone who has accepted it as money, whereas a currency user can only wipe out those to whom it owes money.
Wait a minute, what was that difference again?
The relevant time scale?
Well since we are perpetually on the doorstep of hyperinflation or default, I'd have to say the time scale on public debt is imminent! Just ask Peter Schiff!
I kid. My environmentalist leanings have always left me with cognitive dissonance towards a Keynesian mindset that I tend to think works for economics. As I've been diving deeper into the machinations of our federal surveillance state, foreign wars, and corporatocracy, I'm starting to wonder more and more what they systemic risk is to this country of having so many Americans and corporations dependent on an ever-growing top-line (aggregate demand) to supply a sustainable bottom line (paying the bills and living a happy lifestyle).
We build so much on leverage, yet we expect defense (and other) corporations to just go quietly into the night when they've built their entire business structure on requiring ever-higher gross revenues. I recently saw a documentary on food (Fed Up, I think). It raised the point that even if we wanted our kids eating healthier, it's almost impossible when you've got a food industry that is built to feed them Pizza Hut more than steamed veggies and healthy meats. They are actually quite leveraged into this position, which makes them unable to change quickly, and therefore any efforts to limit their gross revenues are going to be met with some extreme survival-instinct reactions that wouldn't be as strongly motivated if they were in a more flexible financial position.
However, I still fervently believe that business interest of various size are NOT served by an austerity mindset, as they often claim. When I hear a business owner with inadequate sales complaining about low interest rates and/or high spending, I truly wonder if he knows how bad it would be for him to have an "Austrian" fiscal/monetary policy. Obviously this doesn't apply to all businesses or sectors, but certainly a lot of them.
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine