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by davidverhasselt
2737 days ago
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To stay in your simplified universe, consider just two entities, A and B. A has all $100K, B has $0. - A loans $100K to B at 10%. - B buys raw materials from A for $100K and creates products X and Y. - A buys product X from B for $60K. - B returns $60K to A. - A buys product Y from B for $60K. - B returns $50K to B. A ends up with $90K and product X and Y. B ends up with $10K. At no step was money created out of thin air. Total supply still $100K. You could simplify it some more by allowing B to pay back A using product X and Y instead of moving $60K around back and forth. |
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- A loans $100K to both B and C at 10%.
- B makes X and Y, C make Q and R.
- B and C can produce and sell X,Y,Q, and R to one another to their mutual hearts content, creating a lot of value, but in the end A can only be satisfied by $220K. Either B or C is going to end up short.
Why would A accept X or Y when it's detrimental to their business interests to do so?