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by neilwilson
1047 days ago
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“Spitznagel believes the rising interest expense on federal government debts will ultimately constrain fiscal spending, slow economic growth” Yet if I give you $100 and you spend it that will create extra transactions and extra tax. Therefore increased interest payments are just the same as mailing a stimulus cheque to those who already have money. More transactions = more growth not less. We can of course change the distribution. Pass legislation requiring base rates to be set to zero permanently. [0] Government debt rates will then automatically fall to Japanese levels. As Japan demonstrates. [0]: https://theconversation.com/interest-rates-the-case-for-cutt... |
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> Suppose I own a forest that regenerates at 2% per year and is worth £1 million in timber overall. I could log the forest sustainably, cutting down trees only in line with the speed of regeneration, which would earn me £20,000 a year.
> But with interest rates at 5.25%, I would do better to cut down everything, invest my £1 million into bonds, and earn upwards of £52,500 in annual interest (I say upwards because the rate of interest on bonds is usually a little way above the central bank base rate).