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by imgabe
2563 days ago
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Is it necessarily a bad thing to be a net debtor? Generally when a business or country borrows money it's because they can put it to some productive use that generates a greater return than the cost of borrowing. If the US is borrowing money, it means that it's making productive use of other countries' assets and getting return from those assets that the other countries are not. This should be a good thing (for the US). People tend to react to news about national debt like it's their credit card bill that they ran up on takeout food and flatscreen TVs. It's not really the same thing. |
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China still have a lot of poor people.
Normally you want credit to flow from richer parts of the world to poorer parts of the world - where there is a lot more potential for growth.
NNIT is meaningless metric for larger countries.
China is a net creditor because they have certain national interest, their large credit position provides a buffer in international trade.
US acts a gold vault in international trading, China has certain industries that "generate gold" but their main focus is meeting the demand for their domestic market, just like most other countries in the list.