Runs on banks are the clearest demonstration that there is no fiat that runs where money is concerned. This may be pure semantics but the only thing of importance when money is used in a transaction is that the parties to that transaction agree that the money exchanged has a certain amount of value. No government can ascribe any kind of value to currency, be it gold or paper, value is only assigned at the moment of exchange.
It doesn't matter who or what creates the money, value is bound in agreement. Banks are only able to "create" money because a loan transaction occurs where both parties agree a value, (in line with the collective valuation of the market)
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 23:56 (fourteen years ago)
No government can ascribe any kind of value to currency, be it gold or paper, value is only assigned at the moment of exchange.
the currency has an agreed value, the value being decided at any given transaction is that of the good being exchanged
― 10/11 of a dead jesus (darraghmac), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 23:58 (fourteen years ago)
exactly
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:01 (fourteen years ago)
i was disagreeing with you!
― 10/11 of a dead jesus (darraghmac), Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:10 (fourteen years ago)
When customers make a run on a bank, the one and only thing they are seeking is that same currency that you seem to think they are showing no confidence in. On the contrary a bank run is evidence that the customers have no confidence in the bank, but boundless confidence in the value of the currency they deposited there.
Imagine the contrary situation where the value of the currency has been destroyed through inflation. In such a case, the customer knows that there will be plenty of money in the bank to cover their deposit. Bank runs don't happen in those circumstances. However, whatever money a person lays their hands on is almost certain to be spent quickly, rather than put in a bank.
It appears you have a somewhat confused knowledge on this subject.
― Aimless, Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:10 (fourteen years ago)
this is such a disgusting sentence, how can you even live with yourself after typing it?
― ogmor, Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:16 (fourteen years ago)
i really don't know why you think anything i said is "ridiculous," ed. i gave the definition of what fiat money is, i didn't say that the markets don't determine the value of currency at any given point of time. if anything, untethering the value of a currency from gold (or other commodity) actually aids markets in determining the true worth of currency.
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:18 (fourteen years ago)
bit strong imo
― 10/11 of a dead jesus (darraghmac), Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:20 (fourteen years ago)
also, aimless OTM regarding bank runs. those are really judgments about the soundness of the financial institution and not a judgment on the soundness of the currency deposited there. or at least not if you have something like the FDIC.
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:23 (fourteen years ago)
I stand by the sentence. That is exactly what Ed's posts reveal to me. otoh, it appears ogmor has a delicate stomach.
― Aimless, Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:28 (fourteen years ago)
pfft, he's a physician now and all
― 10/11 of a dead jesus (darraghmac), Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:29 (fourteen years ago)
He can palp my liver, but he ought not to prescribe in this area.
― Aimless, Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:32 (fourteen years ago)
it appears i have a somewhat confused stomach.
― ogmor, Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:32 (fourteen years ago)
not to get name-droppy and anecdotal here, but i was actually working (as a compliance consultant) at a (now-defunct) bank which went under because of a run by its depositors right after Lehman Bros. collapsed. this institution's failure had everything to do with a lack of confidence in the institution itself, and nothing to do with a lack of confidence in American currency.
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Thursday, 18 August 2011 00:34 (fourteen years ago)
this can either be through fiscal policy (govt spending and taxation) or monetary policy (interest rates/money supply)
what does monetary policy actually involve? (i don't really understand interest rates and don't know what you mean by money supply)
(quantitative easing)
i kept going to meetings a few months ago where this was brought up as a possible solution and people always said that it wasn't because no one fully understands it. what...is it? and...why does no one understand it?
prop up demand
like "confidence" and "risk", i'm slightly confused by "demand" as a quantifiable/predictable/concrete thing. a lot of economics seems to assume that people's desires can be manipulated? it doesn't seem to allow for much human irrationality?
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 14:40 (fourteen years ago)
i had other questions (those were from lamp's big post last night) but i started writing that a few hours then had to do other shit so thought it was best if i just post those questions for now
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 14:41 (fourteen years ago)
that's also why it is so hard for folks inclined to Keynesianism and strong fiscal policy have such a hard time convincing the lay public about the advantages of their proposed programs. on its face, it flies against "common sense" -- i.e., that in bad times one does not waste money, pays down debts and saves more. this is where all of this talk about "the government needs to balance its checkbook!" comes from and from which such rhetoric derives its strength. the GOP has made much political hay (and caused much economic damage) by using this misleading analysis (it is misleading because the government isn't a "household," and even in bad times households do take on increased debt [to pay for education or economically-productive products like computer software]).
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Wednesday, August 17, 2011 5:51 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
this rings totally true though! it's completely counter-intuitive and i don't understand why you're right, if you are. i don't understand why the government isn't a household. and i disagree that households that are completely broke will take on debt.
also if this is the case how the hell does anyone ever expect this argument to be on the winning side?
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 14:44 (fourteen years ago)
Lamp's explained the demand bit after that though. If the economy is slowing or in recession then the government can (if it chooses) pump money into, say, infrastructure projects or construction of schools or hospitals. This creates demand for construction firms, architects, building materials, steel, whatever. The companies that provide those services are then getting work they wouldn't otherwise due to the private sector slowdown. This means they can keep workers on, or indeed hire new workers. Those people will be in a reasonably secure job for the duration of that project, if they're lucky, so they'll be more likely to spend their own cash, and so it continues through the system.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 18 August 2011 14:47 (fourteen years ago)
this is true - the question before "economics?" should be "what is money?"!― post, Wednesday, August 17, 2011 6:41 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark
― post, Wednesday, August 17, 2011 6:41 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark
yeah this thread nvr took off: What does money represent?
― old money entertainment (history mayne), Thursday, 18 August 2011 14:48 (fourteen years ago)
No! If it's a choice between borrowing money and letting their children starve on the streets, most households would opt for borrowing the money, if they could. But a government isn't like a household because it can continue to borrow for longer and can never go bust, although it can get into a lot of trouble like eg Greece.
Also, no matter how big a government's debt or deficit is, they still need to keep the economy moving to stop tax revenues drying up even furher. If tax revenues dry up, then the debt or deficit will get bigger. So if consumers and businesses won't spend in sufficient quantities, the government has to in order to stop that happening. This is why a lot of economists are arguing that they shouldn't be austerity measures until the economy has recovered, because otherwise they'll make the situation and deficit worse not better.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 18 August 2011 14:52 (fourteen years ago)
i don't understand why the government isn't a household. and i disagree that households that are completely broke will take on debt.also if this is the case how the hell does anyone ever expect this argument to be on the winning side?
The basic idea is that if a household stops spending and saves instead, then it has more money - it has taken it out of the game
But if everyone stops spending and saves money - then not only are fewer things being sold so less jobs needed, but also there is less money in the game full stop
just as money appears when loans are made...it disappears when debts are paid off.
debt is presented as a "problem" but it really isn't. Think about the amount people owe in loans and mortgages - then think about the number of people who have savings and how much they are likely to have saved. they are hardly equivalent. most people don't have tens and hundreds of thousands of savings..
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:00 (fourteen years ago)
Yes, it's worth mentioning that if there was no debt than virtually nothing would get done. No one would have the cash to buy a house, build a building, establish a business, anything, which means fewer jobs. No one except a few people who'd inherited money, and most of them would have had ancestors relying on debt at some point.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:03 (fourteen years ago)
debt is presented as a "problem" but it really isn't. Think about the amount people owe in loans and mortgages - then think about the number of people who have savings and how much they are likely to have saved. they are hardly equivalent. most people don't have tens and hundreds of thousands of savings..― colby, Thursday, August 18, 2011 4:00 PM (2 seconds ago) Bookmark
― colby, Thursday, August 18, 2011 4:00 PM (2 seconds ago) Bookmark
this sort of presents the current distribution of property and power as not a problem!
― old money entertainment (history mayne), Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:04 (fourteen years ago)
the concept of debt - not its current manifestation
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:05 (fourteen years ago)
But a government isn't like a household because it can continue to borrow for longer and can never go bust, although it can get into a lot of trouble like eg Greece.
so why did greece get into trouble? i don't really understand exactly what greece's trouble is or why we're not in the same trouble.
This is why a lot of economists are arguing that they shouldn't be austerity measures until the economy has recovered
but isn't the only reason austerity measures are needed BECAUSE the economy is shit?
i have no idea what "the economy is shit" even means.
owing tens of thousands of pounds in loans sounds like a problem to me! also i tend to thinking that mortgages are terrifying and the only way i ever want to pay for a house is if i have that amount of money in cash. you can't predict the future!
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:06 (fourteen years ago)
so our economy relies on
- debt- money that isn't real- borrowing money you don't have
WHAT THE FUCK
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:07 (fourteen years ago)
Once I tried to calculate how many times a dollar has to change hands every year for the US economy to be healthy, but I couldn't really figure out how to start and bogged down.
― L.P. Hovercraft (WmC), Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:08 (fourteen years ago)
there's no growth, and a large gap between government revenue and government expenditure, necessitating borrowing, 'debauching the currency', etc. the second question relates to the 'household' meme. the growth question is more interesting.
― old money entertainment (history mayne), Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:08 (fourteen years ago)
The UK owes more than Greece, but we also bring more in in tax due to being a much bigger economy, so we can cope with paying off that debt. Also we are trusted by lenders to keep paying back, so they're okay with continuing to lend. The same isn't true of Greece.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:09 (fourteen years ago)
owing tens of thousands of pounds in loans sounds like a problem to me!
Well the idea is that you have something (a house - a company - some shares - a big bag of diamonds) that you could sell to pay back that loan, if necessary
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:10 (fourteen years ago)
who are the lenders? why are we trusted? what happens if they capriciously (and UNPREDICTABLY) stop trusting us?
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:12 (fourteen years ago)
i wouldn't fucking trust us
also why isn't this taught in schools?
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:15 (fourteen years ago)
The lenders are the banks - who write the money into existence, they trust us because they know that people will work for the bulk of their lives to pay it back
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:15 (fourteen years ago)
If everyone wasn't in debt and didn't have to work to keep hold of their things and pay it all back...then people would take a different view of work and it wouldn't be a 40 year stretch
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:17 (fourteen years ago)
The lenders are banks. They trust people because a) they have enough data to know they can, or that the risk is lower than with other people, and because they have mechanisms in place to insure against the risk (some sensible, some utterly bonkers and useless as we've seen). They lend the money because they're reasonably sure they will get more back.
what happens if they capriciously (and UNPREDICTABLY) stop trusting us
This is what the credit crunch is. Lenders stopped trusting borrowers, initially banks stopped trusting other banks to be able to pay back the money they lent them, this meant banks stopped trusting the businesses they lent to, those businesses were more likely to go bust as a result, and the whole system started to collapse.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:17 (fourteen years ago)
They lend the money because they're reasonably sure they will get more back
Well they also lent it because on an individual level there were personal incentives to do so - and if you know you're not necessarily going to be working for that institution when it all goes wrong, then why not? You only have to worry about what happens while you are working at that particular institution
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:20 (fourteen years ago)
this thread is making me oscillate between feeling really dumb and thinking everyone else is really dumb. that cessation of trust seems so obvious to me, like OF COURSE it was gonna happen. the entire system seems ridiculously flawed and fragile.
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:21 (fourteen years ago)
OF COURSE it was gonna happen. the entire system seems ridiculously flawed and fragile.
― lex pretend, Thursday, August 18, 2011 11:21 AM
If i take a decision at my work that will make me, personally, a lot of money over the next 3 years but will destroy my company in 10...what do i do?
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:23 (fourteen years ago)
And can i be trusted to regulate myself to make sure i don't make that decision
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:24 (fourteen years ago)
who gets to trust the banks?
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:25 (fourteen years ago)
or not trust them
other banks
― groovemaaan, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:29 (fourteen years ago)
Lex's thought processes must be much like those of a cartoon character when it realises it's run off the edge of the cliff and is standing on thin air.
Or alternatively a bit like everything we've gone through in three years except all hitting home at once.
who gets to trust the banks? or not trust them?
These are the questions that governments are wrestling with the world over.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:29 (fourteen years ago)
i watched the first 10 minutes of the video tracer video and it's like an actual horror film when the main protagonist keeps going off by themselves to explore empty rooms down darkened corridors and not bothering to turn on the light
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:31 (fourteen years ago)
the history of modern banking seems to be
- banker does something greedy and stupid- people find out and are briefly annoyed- and then go "oh it's ok, never mind"
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:32 (fourteen years ago)
― lex pretend, Thursday, August 18, 2011
This kind of seems to have happened again quite recently!
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:35 (fourteen years ago)
when you all first learned about this, did you at any point have the same "THIS IS COMPLETELY MAD" reaction that i'm having, and if not why not?
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:40 (fourteen years ago)
I did!
― colby, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:42 (fourteen years ago)
the entire edifice seems optimistic to the point of stupidity
when i've finished writing this piece i am actually going to email my libertarian friend in arizona and ask her about silver
― lex pretend, Thursday, 18 August 2011 15:43 (fourteen years ago)