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by liuliu 2306 days ago
It can go negative, or Fed can do another round of QE, there are plenty of tools. The real question is whether the deficit can grow indefinitely without consequences, and if this is a moral hazard (e.g. no risk priced in borrowing).
3 comments

It can grow larger than people realize.

As long as other countries do business in USD and keep buying US debt, the party keeps going.

With fiat, you can spend as much as the combined purchasing power of all your citizens through money printing.

When you’re the reserve currency, that pool is extended to the purchasing power of many many countries.

That’s probably why, from a strategic POV, the US must remain the largest military force and continue to police the world.

With dollar hegemony, the US might even introduce new ways (like MMT) of sipping purchasing power of participants.

Yeah the party keeps going, but the crash will be worse. Worse crashes means more time to recover, more americans lose their jobs, and so on.
100%
The European experience has shown that negative rates aren't really working, other than killing the local banking system.
Well that's not what the former ECB chairman Mario Draghi thought about it. According to him they were a success .. See e.g. http://www.ekathimerini.com/245837/article/ekathimerini/busi...

But even mr. Draghi might agree that right now the ECB is pretty powerless, given that it's rates are already below zero.

That's because it's not a monetary policy problem, but a fiscal policy problem.

If you insist in fixing your home with your car jack, don't complain about the results.

When we design policy around increasing the value of the stock market, we effectively give stock-holders power. Good policy should create efficient markets, not "high value" ones.
What does the deficit have to do with the Fed? QE doesn't grow the deficit.
Deficit is funded through debt (treasury notes). Fed buys treasury notes (through QE) and sets the interest rate on these debt. Lower interest rate in short-term reduces deficit (smaller coupon payment), but in longer-term encourages borrowing.