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by vkou
1177 days ago
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> I think that's what the commenter was getting at, but I think the fixation on banks as a way of "printing money" as a big problem is wildly overblown. Actually, most of this fixation is directed at grousing at the Fed for creating money, while ignoring the roles of retail banks issuing loans in creating money. > Creating a successful company creates money. No, it doesn't. Creating a successful company creates value. Creating value often results in creating movement of money. The velocity of money in the economy is a loose proxy for the overall health of the economy. > Crypto created money. Yes, it did. One of the criticisms of it is that the amount of 'money' it created * the current value of that 'money' is significantly smaller than the amount of value it created. |
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> Creating a successful company creates value. Creating value often results in creating movement of money. The velocity of money in the economy is a loose proxy for the overall health of the economy.
It creates money in the same way a loan does. There are no new dollar bills printed, and yet people behave as if those dollars are in more places at once. People pull forward future (expected) company revenue to put a current value number on the company and then they exchange money for parts of that company, and adjust their spending habits based on that present value. Like how in a loan they pull forward a future value of the sum of their expected payments on the loan, in order to increase the velocity of those dollars that were loaned out vs them sitting in a mattress.
I suppose my quibble is that the concepts of "creating value" vs "creating money" distinction is largely meaningless in a world where we have so many mechanisms for exchanging money for the expectations of future money or value. Or even for the derivatives of those expectations!