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by qwytw
1011 days ago
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I guess the idea that directly giving out money to consumers is more beneficial to the economy (e.g. if the government just gives a $1000 check to everyone making under 100k) they are more likely to just spend it on goods and services. If the central bank printed an equivalent amount per capita, more of it would be invested (into both productive and unproductive assets). On the other hand that wouldn't increase consumer good inflation as much. |
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First, if you just hand money to individuals, it's very hard to remove that money from the economy later. If the central bank injects money by buying an asset, like a government bond, they can just sell it later to (approximately) remove the same amount of money as they previously injected.
> If the central bank printed an equivalent amount per capita, more of it would be invested (into both productive and unproductive assets).
What makes you think so?
Btw, 'money' doesn't really get invested, at least not on the level of the whole economy. If someone invests money by eg buying stock, that same amount of money is now in the seller's hand.
> On the other hand that wouldn't increase consumer good inflation as much.
And if you have an inflation target, you just print more money, until you hit it.