What are your opinions about this economic strategy and what would be some of the pros/cons of establishing this new form of exchange? — Justin Peterson
We all know the world is run by the corporations, might as well make it obvious who’s running what — Justin Peterson
The point would be that it would reduce the deficit of the current economic system to 0 by granting the government the opportunity to pay back its bonds while still maintaining the flow of currency. — Justin Peterson
Also, it would reduce any type of inflation as the government would not be able to print money, and so the bad habits of government spending cannot be sustained. — Justin Peterson
Bitter Crank
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We all know the world is run by the corporations, might as well make it obvious who’s running what
— Justin Peterson
Why not just eliminate the corporations? There's nothing that requires us to have corporations that have the rights of persons (as is the case in the USA). There's no physical law, like gravity or heat transfer, that says we have to have profit making corporations. If we wish to rid ourselves of them, we can (assuming we can muster the will to do so). — Bitter Crank
consider this, let’s say there’s 20trillion dollars in current money in circulation + promised debt. The valuation of how much is given back to the people the country is indebted would be in relation to how much is currently in circulation, but doesn’t account for the promised debt, so they would receive more than gc’s than its value in dollars, because after the gc is settled then the amount in circulation will be equivalent to circulation + debt (so during that time I can pay my taxes with 1 gc instead of 2). — Justin Peterson
Well here’s the thing, the value and the deficit would put the economy at ground at zero. From that point on, no more cryptocurrency can ever exist because cryptocurrency is only ever a set amount and nothing more. It’s basically like filing for bankruptcy, except now the gvt’s credit score would be shit so it can’t get a loan. — Justin Peterson
It’s likely that in this case the UN would have to create a new cryptocurrency based on the global market and analyze what countries get how much currency compared to the value of their dollar and the assets that the countries contain as a whole. — Justin Peterson
Well it would cause no more inflation than if everyone now just withdrew their government bonds. — Justin Peterson
ome mathematicians a lot smarter than me would be able to figure it out but think of it this way, if I make 100k a year, and I usually pay this much in taxes, and it would usually take me X amount of time to pay off those taxes with the money currently owed to me, then I get this many gc’s for the TOTAL amount of gc’s, but since there would be less in circulation at that time you could actually pay off a years worth of taxes for less than if all the gc’s were in circulation, does that make sense? — Justin Peterson
And yes you are right, the government can’t pull money out of thin air anymore, but if I personally don’t go to the bank and pull out $100,000 to buy that new Ferrari I want I’m going to be a lot less flexible than if I did pull that money out. It’s no different for the government. — Justin Peterson
take China for example.. their currency is so inflated that the value of one yen is close to absolutely nothing. If you were to tell them that they could have a currency that holds just as much weight as the American dollar, they’d probably be all for it. — Justin Peterson
Not to mention the American dollar is already almost the staple of the global economic system anyway, if we started using it as a means of exchange they’d almost have no option but to accept, not to mention the value of the currency would be a lot more viable. — Justin Peterson
but in the system we are in now, promising to pay back a loan with money we can create out of thin air is like saying “You give me this money that is worth something now, and I promise to pay it back later but I can’t promise that it’ll be worth anything when I do.” — Justin Peterson
Everyone withdrawing their government bonds would cause total chaos and very serious economic damage. So your statement that it "wouldn't be worse" is not reassuring. — Echarmion
No, it doesn't. I can't make out what you're trying to say. — Echarmion
That's an asinine example. The government doesn't buy Ferraris. — Echarmion
You've got this entirely backwards. The chinese Yen is artificially weakened relative to the dollar, because China relies on exports, and a strong Yen would hurt exports. For a country with a weaker economic productivity per capita, a stronger currency is often a disadvantage. — Echarmion
The American dollar is already the main currency for international exchanges. Almost everyone already accepts it as a means of exchange. — Echarmion
That's not really how loans work. When you give out a loan, that's when you create money out of thin air. And then you have to work to create the goods to actually back that loan. When banks give out loans, they don't actually give you some of their money. Only a small fraction of the loan is backed by money the bank actually has, and even that money stays in the bank. — Echarmion
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