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Peakoil.com :: View topic - How could the US ever default on its debt?
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How could the US ever default on its debt?
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allenwrench
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 6:34 am    Post subject: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

It has been suggested in some of the recent stock market crash books that the US could default on its massive debt.

How could this happen?

The gov does not even have to print money nowadays. It just magnetizes a silicon chip to create billions. What would hold it back from magnetizing a few more microns to pay its debt whether it is billions or trillions?
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Jack
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 6:38 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Inflation.
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hope_full
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 7:28 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Jack wrote:
Inflation.


That's the answer. And that's why economic systems based on a fiat currency *always* fail. And that's why our wise forefathers insisted that the US Currency never devolve into a fiat currency. We violated our own constitution when we severed all ties to the gold standard in 1972.

For more information, look up "Not worth a Continental."

Historically, governments with a fiat currency can not resist the temptation to print their way out of debt and that's when they get into deep doo-doo. I don't think we're going to be any different.

The good news is, there'll be no worries about paying off those credit cards. A little hyperinflation will make that $15,000 VISA look like a nickel on the street that you don't bother to stoop over and retrieve. The bad news is, economic collapse follows hyperinflation.

What's SO discouraging is that this is World History 101. How could we be so foolish as to go traipsing down the same well-worn path that so many other world powers took before us?

HF
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Olle
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 7:31 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

allenwrench wrote:
It has been suggested in some of the recent stock market crash books that the US could default on its massive debt.

How could this happen?

The gov does not even have to print money nowadays. It just magnetizes a silicon chip to create billions. What would hold it back from magnetizing a few more microns to pay its debt whether it is billions or trillions?


Infaltion that would make the Zimbabwean dollar look like a safe heaven...
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Micki
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 7:49 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

As mentioned, that is the decision they have to make.
If they don't have enought to pay the debt they need to default or print. Printing fuels inflation and also drives down the value of the currency compared to other currencies.
As a result, the nation won't be able to import and can't afford buying things that are sold on the international market.
i.e. oil may shoot up to $250/bbl so that Americans can't afford it but foreigners will as their currencies will have strengthend.

Defaulting is really not an option. People want their pensions, companies want to continue existing, foreigners want to be paid what they are owned and Federal Reserve wants to continue existing.

Inflation option allows for all the above....for a while.
The problem with inflation is that the house of cards get taller and taller and trying to then break the cycle makes the deflation much worse than it would have been earlier on.

According to Mises (and logic I would argue) there is however no way of avoiding a collapse if he inflationary path is chosen.
Eventually people lose all their faith in the currency and only barter trade remains.

In a paper or coin based society there is also physical limit to how debased the money can become.
i.e. when metal value of coins is much higer than the face value of the coin, noone will use the coin to pay as per face value.
In weimar one example of paper money having lost most of its value was when people started using paper money in the fireplace instead of buying firewood. i.e. the paper money gave the more fire than the firewood it bought would have.

Right now neither scenario is pretty as the house of cards already is tall as the tower of babel. (i.e. 1.3 Quadrillion dollars in over the counter derivaties waiting to casue a financial meltdown.)

Politicians however always chose the option that causes least pain
in the short term.
Central bankers have in the past also declared that keeping off disaster, even if only for some months, is worth a high price.
Finally, Bernanke has made a career of being a deflation fighter and has so far indicated that the central bank will do what ever it can to keep off deflation.

I am therefore in the inflationary camp.
(Actually in stagflationary as I think salaries will drag and energy prices will take off more and more resulting in stagflationary conditions. ) But generally I think necessities will go up in price.

On a positive note, a really weak currency can create good conditions for export again. But that is years away as muh of manufacturing etc has been dismantled. Furthermore there will be a brain drain and good companies will be taken over by foreigners.
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allenwrench
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 7:51 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Jack wrote:
Inflation.


Don't see it. Please explain.
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Olle
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 7:51 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

hope_full wrote:
Jack wrote:
Inflation.


That's the answer. And that's why economic systems based on a fiat currency *always* fail. And that's why our wise forefathers insisted that the US Currency never devolve into a fiat currency. We violated our own constitution when we severed all ties to the gold standard in 1972.

For more information, look up "Not worth a Continental."

Historically, governments with a fiat currency can not resist the temptation to print their way out of debt and that's when they get into deep doo-doo. I don't think we're going to be any different.

The good news is, there'll be no worries about paying off those credit cards. A little hyperinflation will make that $15,000 VISA look like a nickel on the street that you don't bother to stoop over and retrieve. The bad news is, economic collapse follows hyperinflation.

What's SO discouraging is that this is World History 101. How could we be so foolish as to go traipsing down the same well-worn path that so many other world powers took before us?

HF


Well, history also tells us that all backed currencies sooner or later change into fiat... and then you have hyperinfaltion... and then: "Our new currency will be backed by XYZ, trust us"... and then fiat and then...and so on...

In practice: This is a cycle that Gouverments use to rob their citizens.

But this will of cource not happen this time since "that was then and this is now" Smile

http://www.kwaves.com/fiat.htm
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allenwrench
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 7:54 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

$15,000 like a nickel?

Don't know. They are bragging how wages are not going up...so no wage inflation.

Sure everything else costs more, but wages are stuck.

The gov says inflation is low...it must be true?

It is in the gov favor to keep the inflation figures low so they do not have to pay high % rates on inflation adjusted bonds.

This is what is scary. The gov has lied so much they are starting to believe their own lies now.


Last edited by allenwrench on Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:03 am; edited 1 time in total
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allenwrench
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:02 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Thanks for all the replies.

Inflation has hit most of the world and not just the US.

Where is the tipping point for the US with its money creation scheme?

Or it there no one point and it is just a gradual loss of faith in the dollar?
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TreeFarmer
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:10 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

My take on this goes back to human nature. Human beings are always trying to get something for nothing. It happens over and over and over, in fact Napoleon Hill in his book Think and Grow Rich cautions aginst this over and over.

What apparently happens is that politicians get elected by promising something-for-nothing (i.e. the government will provide it without higher taxes) and then a downward spiral gets started that the politicians don't have the will to stop.

Another good example of this is something that pops up here on peakoil.com all the time, THE CAR THAT RUNS ON WATER. People are lusting mightily after that something for nothing.

If you had economics in college, or maybe in your regular readings you ran across the TANSTAAFL acronym, There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TANSTAAFL

That is the crux of the problem, people vote for whoever promises the most without having to pay for it and self-centered politicians run-up however much debt to get reelected.

TF
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Olle
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:11 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

allenwrench wrote:
Jack wrote:
Inflation.


Don't see it. Please explain.


This is a video that explains it.
Barnenke is impersonated by a young woman (slightly more attractive I might ad) and the fiat currency is represented by a couple of big steel cylinders. If Barneke print too little money; he will fall to the right and if he prints too much money; he falls to the left.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=IxaRxvZSFMo
Please note: If he moves just a little bit too much in either direction; he is immediately powerless…
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MrBill
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:13 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

There are responsible governments running budget surpluses that have positive real interest rates. That is not inflationary. The inflation is being caused by governments running current account deficits as well as those with negative real interest rates. That is bad stewardship of their economies and not a flaw in the system.

Gold is not the answer. Balanced budgets and fully funded future liabilities as well as positive real interest rates are the solution.

I am not convinced that all fiat currencies eventually collapse. Sterling has been around for several centuries and is still serving its purpose. In the meantime many nations have come and gone. So it may be the nation state that is less durable than fiat currencies per se.

Mises said that no asset has an absolute value, but all assets trade relative to one another. Gold also has no intrinsic value, but trades relative to the value of other assets including cash or income earning assets. In an environment of low, stable inflation and high real interest rates gold is not worth much. That is not where we are in the global economy right now, but that is ideally where we should be headed.

In the meantime I am happy with a basket of non-US dollar currencies as a dollar hedge. Gold and other commodities have had a good run, but I am affraid the deflationary forces of deleveraging are very powerful at the moment. It is not as simple as just turning on the printing presses if there is no demand for money.

To be honest given the unfair terms of the Treaty of Versailles and war reparations Weimar Germany had to pay, I can hardly blame them from inflating their way out of debt. Albeit with unforeseen consequences. But that is another story for another day.
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Last edited by MrBill on Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:18 am; edited 1 time in total
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Kingcoal
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:15 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Quote:
re·pu·di·a·tion (r-pyd-shn)
n.
1. The act of repudiating or the state of being repudiated.
2. The refusal, especially by public authorities, to acknowledge a contract or debt.


After the Revolutionary War, many in the newly created government wanted to repudiate the national debt. It's a common practice after "regime change." However, one founding father; Alexander Hamilton, fought against this and won. Hamilton, as the first Secretary of the Treasury, went on to pursue a policy called "assumption," whereby the federal government assumed all the war related debts of the States. It turned out to be a very successful policy. With time, the US obtained a very high credit rating among world investors. Hamilton also fought to have a standing army. He, unlike most of the rest, understood the importance of standing tall in the world, being strong and honoring all debts. Hamilton demonstrated that paying your debts, even if you have a lot of them, is a much more powerful position than declaring them invalid and walking away. With it's strong credit record, the US was able to borrow money easily with good terms, to finance it's growth.

If Hamilton were to suddenly appear in today's world, he would no doubt argue for higher taxes and in particular, for reduced spending. The US got to where it's at by always honoring it's debts. There is no way that the US can repudiate it's debts. Countries can't go bankrupt, they live under different rules than individuals. When Hamilton was in office, the country was technically bankrupt and that didn't stop it from paying off it's debts. Bankruptcy doesn't apply to countries, rather, the term; bad monetary policy does. We've had about 8 years of bad monetary policy and it shows. When GWB took office he inherited a budget surplus and then, with the blessings of Congress, went on to spend more than all the previous presidents combined. That spending has not generated wealth for the country; that's the problem. There is nothing wrong with a country going into debt, investing in it's future. If those investments are smart and prudent, wealth is created and future generations benefit. If those investments are reckless, debt is generated with nothing to show for it, which hurts the country's world credit standing; i.e., currency depreciation. Hence our present situation.
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allenwrench
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:18 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

What was difference in the old days? Volker? FDR? Whomever? Was gov more ethical back in the day?

Or was free flowing, cheap oil and managing a relatively small US population the difference?
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allenwrench
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 8:38 am    Post subject: Re: How could the US ever default on its debt? Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Olle wrote:
allenwrench wrote:
Jack wrote:
Inflation.


Don't see it. Please explain.


This is a video that explains it.
Barnenke is impersonated by a young woman (slightly more attractive I might ad) and the fiat currency is represented by a couple of big steel cylinders. If Barneke print too little money; he will fall to the right and if he prints too much money; he falls to the left.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=IxaRxvZSFMo
Please note: If he moves just a little bit too much in either direction; he is immediately powerless…



ahhh... the Goldilocks economy they promote at CNBC...'not too hot...not too cold...just right.'

But that is a fairy tale?

Back in the day, it seemed the Fed reserve did not have such a mania for avoiding a recession at all costs. I may be wrong, but they seemed to let recessions happen to cure the patient. But back in the day people had pensions and not self guided plans they have now.

Isn't Greenspan's excessively low interest rates to encourage unaffordable borrowing one of the reasons we got into this housing mess? Apparently he did not follow the Goldilocks formula of 'not too hot...not too cold...just right.'

Or is that how the administration planned it?

Keep the economy going by any means necessary. Encourage the public with continue to compulsively spend. The corporations balance sheets will look good (with a little doctoring) and the retirement funds will only go up and people will feel good and spend more....then let the next guy sort it out when a new administration come in.
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