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by nhaehnle
5419 days ago
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Sorry for repeating myself, but the US government will always be able to repay the money. They are the ones who maintain the authoritative databases that contain the information about how many reserves the commercial banks have and who owns the debt. The only obligation associated with repaying the debt is to change an entry in the debt database, and do a corresponding change to an entry in the reserves database. Since the government maintains these databases, they will always be able to do that. There are a number of problematic things that might happen in the future. For example, if all the owners of the debt suddenly decided to go on a spending spree, then they might cause some (heightened, but non-hyper) inflation if the economy simply isn't able to produce enough real goods and services to fulfill the increased demand. Then politics has a choice of either weathering the inflation or raising taxes to fight it, and there might be other tough choices of equity and social justice involved. But the ability to repay the money simply cannot be an issue, and nobody can accurately predict whether any of those other problems will ever happen. |
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I take your point that America will always be technically able to print money in order to pay back the debt.
But wouldn't printing that amount of money destroy the value of the US dollar? Causing all sorts of other issues?