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What if people refuse to use your currency to trade goods and services? What if they tell you to fuck off when you ask them to pay you your own fun bucks? And I'm not just talking about Americans that you have over the barrel of your gun. I'm talking about the rest of the world.
This entire scenario is specifically about what happens when your power to enforce the privilege of exchanging debt for ressources ends.
What happens when US treasuries are no longer viewed as the most risk free investment vehicle in the world and are replaced by something else and demand craters?
The answer is usually that you'll have to dip into foreign currency reserves or sell hard assets, but what do you do when you run out?
What if I start paying your military men in the new harder currency to loot your country?
Money is debt. So that would be inflation, which was definitely covered from the start. That is absolutely the relevant constraint on government deficit spending.
As far as the exchange rate goes: in the very worst case scenario of your exchange rate suffering, you can always at least import as much as you export. That's true whether you even have your own currency or not. But if you have a currency that foreigners are willing to save in (a world 'reserve currency', which basically all currencies are to different degrees), that just allows you the luxury of importing even more than you export (not necessary, but can be nice, although then your exporter businesses might start bitching about your country's 'trade deficit', so it's not all roses).
As I tried explaining procedurally above, it doesn't matter a single iota whether there's any market demand for treasuries. That's the charade part of it. The government effectively is just printing money as they deficit spend, and they always have been. They print the money, they set how much interest money pays (if any), and we have to get the government's money regardless of anything, in order to pay taxes.
If the king wants something done, he levies a tax on the subjects. Then he prints up some tally sticks, and pays them out to people to do the thing. Then they pay their tax, and he burns the tally sticks. Same with colonial american paper money: levy a tax, print up some stacks, get the work done, then shred the money as it gets paid back in taxes.
So you're just going to repeat back MMT to me as if I haven't read Tcherneva and never heard of chartalism? Come on, at least engage with the idea of a debt crisis. Do you really think everyone from Louis XVI to Hindenburg was too stupid to realize they could just raise taxes to lower inflation? The political expediency of reasonable policy matters, and all I see from MMT proponents is a total faith in the impossibility of default or hyperinflation.
I'd like you to at least acknowledge recent history, seeing as though your model is supposed to model it.
This just isn't true. I've actually we lived in countries where that wasn't true. Getting your state looted by foreign creditors is a real thing that really happens to people. Ask any Russian.
At some point people just start demanding real collateral. How does MMT explain the Pepsi fleet exactly?
On the other side of the dunning-kruger scale, this is loudly announcing 'I looked up the wikipedia page'. And I'm not just repeating MMT back to you. I answered your precise first question by showing you how the actual government finance operations work in the US, with a link to an official testimony people find a bit shocking and interesting if they know anything about what's being discussed, and you thought that sounded like monopoly money that 'nobody gives a shit about'. You can't really be helped if you don't know the first thing about any of this.
Involuntary default in your own currency that you issue? Definitely impossible. Inflation? I already started with that covered as the real constraint.
Ok, we're nearly up to countries can go to war with each other. Can you try to tie this back in to the fiscal responsibility of US republicans & democrats? Do you have any prediction about the timeline of the US becoming Russia?
By which I mean that the real world implications of monetary policy is what matters.
You'll have to forgive me that I'm frustrated that every single time I try to discuss this topic with MMT advocates they do this same exact thing of just trying to discuss the accounting instead of what the policy actually results it empirically. It's about as enjoyable as trying to get Austrians who rant about praxeology to acknowledge empirical evidence.
Who said anything about involuntary? You can default or print your way out, that's the choice, but what I'm trying to get you to acknowledge is the process up to that point. What leads you to that choice?
High enough deficits mean that the state can no longer borrow enough value to sustain itself because the rising inflation requires high interest rates and thus ultimately create a dilemma between letting inflation run and nullify the debt and wipe out personal wealth or default and start having to sell off assets to finance basic services.
Since both of these create massive political instability, good government requires avoiding the circumstances that create this dilemma, and thus a limit on non-productive spending.
Both Ds and Rs are currently committed for political reasons to infinite amounts of such non-productive spending and that's a bad thing.
10 to 30 years, 1.5 wars with Iran or 1 total destruction of a carrier group.
Assuming no unpredictable technological innovation or total war, of course.
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