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by ahnick
2126 days ago
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I agree with your statements about the non government sector and other items; however, I still don't follow your line of argumentation. My understanding of why the US can print money without regard for consequences is because there are always "buyers" for US dollars, b/c countries need US Dollars to carry out business (e.g. China in order to maintain their export driven economy or the fact that the USD is used as the standard unit of currency in international markets for commodities such as gold and petroleum). Yes, there are technically other currencies that are part of the foreign exchange reserves, but none as prevalent as the USD. As I understand it, this demand for US dollars is what allows USD to remain the dominant reserve currency and why when the US prints money it does not result in catastrophic inflation. If a country like Argentina tries to do what the US does it won't work out, because there is no demand for Argentinian dollars. The conclusion I'm left with is that the balance sheet is largely irrelevant until the demand for US Dollar decreases. The real question in my mind is exactly what would cause that to occur? Most everything I read is that the network effect of the USD causes everyone to continue to use it, but perhaps something like a war between the US and China might be a precipitating event to decreased demand? |
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I agree if I change this to: the conclusion I'm left with is that the balance sheet is largely irrelevant (towards any inflationary terms) until the demand for US Dollar denominated debt decreases and is followed by increasing money supply without the increase in debt (government $ denom, corporate $ denom, and individual $ denom on net) and without increasing derivatives notional outstanding on that debt.
> The real question in my mind is exactly what would cause that to occur?
When intl banks get more comfortable with issuing debt (secured and unsecured) in non USD terms, I then would expect demand for USD fall as well so long the US maintains a trade deficit.
With the sunset of LIBOR in 2021, I expect things to pick up more on this front (Not everyone thinks SOFR is sufficient or lacks collateral to participate to the degree they currently need), though that's not stopping banks and OTC market making entities in various derivatives that extend credit in some form, including the use of cryptocurrencies.
A big problem with EM's is a lack of acceptable collateral backing the debt (arguably, this is the issue with the current global monetary system), investors wouldn't mind argentinian debt if they could have those debts backed by sufficient collateral in the event of default (sans the IMF bailout assumption of course, though some creditors continue to get hosed every time the default).