|
|
|
|
|
by somenameforme
1043 days ago
|
|
The way the US government raises money is by selling treasuries with interest. Give me $100 now and I'll give you $105 in a year type stuff. Those rates are determined by market mechanics. If you set the rates to $0, nobody would buy them, and the government would be unable to raise money. The Fed rate is something else, the rate banks pay to each other for [generally] brief lending. As for Japan, I find their name pops up oddly frequently in economic discussions. I suspect many of us still have an image of them from a time when we were growing up and their economy was booming - predicted by some to imminently surpass even the US. Here [1] is a graph of its GDP including and since then. They been in a state somewhere between decay and stagnation for nearly 3 decades now. [1] - https://www.statista.com/statistics/263578/gross-domestic-pr... |
|
Lots of people want that. Particularly those with tax bills to pay in dollars.
Why repeat the myth?