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by skookumchuck
3027 days ago
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Student loans are either guaranteed by the government, or there are special rules like you cannot discharge those loans via bankruptcy. Otherwise, banks would not make such loans. Ultimately, if the loan is not repaid, and there is no collateral nor assets to seize, it comes out of the assets of the bank. This is still fundamentally different from counterfeiting. |
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>Ultimately, if the loan is not repaid, and there is no collateral nor assets to seize, it comes out of the assets of the bank
Which bank in this case (since we're talking about government student loans, not private ones…)? Federal Reserve Bank of (NY, St Louis, Cleveland, etc)? Where do they get the money from?
Increasingly more (because seriously how much does yearly tax revenues pay the bill in full?), the government getting private (other central banks/ institutions/very wealthy individuals) buyers to buy their treasury notes/bills at record breaking supply auctions with currency that originated somehow from central banks…
Although the textbook definitions of counterfeiting and debt monetization may differ, I suspect there will be those who will never even question how the two could be perceived to be similar by anyone without dismissing them as completely insane and incapable of logical thought…
And somehow in the midst of this, we loose sight on resource allocation in general…