Tuesday, September 27, 2005

WHERE THE RELIEF MONEY COMES FROM: NOWHERE

Spending has been literally out of control since Nixon abolished the gold standard.

How does the federal government pay for the damages caused by Katrina? Does anyone asking that question actually know how the government pays for anything? Essentially, the federal government pays for things in just one way — it credits a member bank account. Let’s review the process: The federal government writes a check to a construction company to pay for a bridge. The construction company deposits the check at a bank. When that check clears, the Fed credits the bank’s reserve account at the Fed, and then the bank credits the company’s bank account with “good funds.” Bottom line: Operationally, virtually all of the federal government’s spending per se consists of the Fed crediting an account — that’s all. The federal government doesn’t have any “box of money” that gets “filled” from tax collections and the proceeds from new Treasury securities and then gets “used up” by spending or lending. This is an operational reality. In today’s world of non-convertible currencies, spending is necessarily nothing more than “score keeping.” (If one football team scores a touchdown, and 6 points are added to its score, does anyone ask where the scorekeeper gets the points?)

So, the actual “paying for Katrina” is not the issue. The issue is the real economic ramifications of the proposed spending or the proposed tax increases — the impact on inflation, output, growth, employment, distribution, etc.

1 comment:

Sir said...

Yes and it gets worse as we move away from even paper currency to eletronic currency. I do 95% of all my transactions online now and it's just numbers in quicken. This is the rationalzation groups like "the Montana Freeman" and others give when they print their own money from their "soverign" states. I wish I had a money machine like the fed to just "credit" my account whenever I needed it. "Backed by the Full Faith and Credit of Dr. Saunders"

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