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You know when you, say, your computer gets an error, and you try to fix it yourself, and the computer becomes erratic, crashes, etc. and it ends up even worse than before? Well, thats kind of like what happens when you have governments interfere with the market.
Yeah... But still.. Do anyone know where the money is coming from? Who is paying this? Is the money just printed? In that case the effects will definetely be very bad..
You know when you, say, your computer gets an error, and you try to fix it yourself, and the computer becomes erratic, crashes, etc. and it ends up even worse than before? Well, thats kind of like what happens when you have governments interfere with the market.
You know when you, say, your computer gets an error, and you try to fix it yourself, and the computer becomes erratic, crashes, etc. and it ends up even worse than before? Well, thats kind of like what happens when you have governments interfere with the market.
They will either Borrow money, or print.Yeah... But still.. Do anyone know where the money is coming from? Who is paying this? Is the money just printed? In that case the effects will definetely be very bad..
You missed the point by a huge long shot. Either way, the computer is ****ed. So, the moral, if you can't fix it yourself, how do you get it fixed?To continue the analogy, on the other hand, if you don't fix your computer, you later find your hard drive has been irrevocably corrupted and your entire system is ****ed.
While I don't always get it right the first time, when my computer is broken I eventually fix it.
You missed the point by a huge long shot. Either way, the computer is ****ed. So, the moral, if you can't fix it yourself, how do you get it fixed?
Ok, pretend your in the United States Senate. Your 72 and can't even write an e-mail. Are you telling me that you could fix it yourself? Even if it was a critical error?Given the alternative, I'll at least try to fix it rather than watch it sit there broken. I'm usually successful. Would you agree that it at least makes sense to try to fix it?
Ok, pretend your in the United States Senate. Your 72 and can't even write an e-mail. Are you telling me that you could fix it yourself? Even if it was a critical error?
Now replace computer with economy and you get the effect.
Yea, unfortunately, the people who you would hire to fix the computer, are crooks themselves.Fortunately we didn't hire the 72 year old who can't even write an email to fix the computer! Now that would have been a pretty stupid thing to do, eh?
Yea, unfortunately, the people who you would hire to fix the computer, are crooks themselves.
well of course it is printed...but it is backed by the productivity of the USA's industries....which has been eroding for decades as jobs go overseas....
that is as far as I can go, the rest is doodoo economics.:shock:
Some of the money comes from increased Govt debt. Finding funding hasn't been particularly difficult at the moment because everyone is pulling money out of investments and buying th safest things they can, ie Govt debt. That doesn't necessarily increase the total money supply.
Fed direct investment or lending is fiat money. That will have inflationary effects. However, with the economy in a deflationary mode at the moment, inflation is not the currect overriding concern.
They will either Borrow money, or print.
Well I'd have to see proof of that accusation. But to be honest, if he overcharges me a couple bucks but makes the computer work, I'm really not that upset about it.
How can you know this? How can you know the computer will work, when the problems are beyond the experts to fix, and they just try their best?
Yes, but this is a problem is it not? It will shrink the money supply in the end, and the people end up paying for it all, correct?
Who are you talking about?Well I'd have to see proof of that accusation. But to be honest, if he overcharges me a couple bucks but makes the computer work, I'm really not that upset about it.
You mean expand the money supply?
Yes, there may ultimately be an inflationary consequence, as well as the Govt being even deeper in debt.
Will it? Printing money and increasing the money supply when the fundamentals of the economy is shrinking, will that not in the end shrink the money supply? I dont know, I can only imagine it will.. Governments have to tighten their budgets, people have to pay more for their stuff etc etc etc.
Yeah... But still.. Do anyone know where the money is coming from? Who is paying this? Is the money just printed? In that case the effects will definetely be very bad..
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