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Harry's avatar

After thirty years in the bond market, I have come to think that central banking is pretty much the same thing as central planning, with similarly bad success rates. It’s always worth remembering that the Fed is the US’ third central bank, its predecessors having gone, er, bankrupt.

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Ed’s Essays on Economics's avatar

I think MV=PV has sufficiently proven its ineffectiveness. Ballooning the balance sheets of both FED and ECB lead to bubbles and asset inflation—not inflation of consumer prices. Or am I missing something here? In the data I read supply shortages and a very low supply elasticity exacerbating post Covid excess demand. The aggregate supply curve was nearly flat.

I don’t know. LT yields augment when inflation expectations rise. These rise with uncertainty when markets get rattled by unpredictable behavior of decision makers.

US debt is covered by private and foreign sector balances and there are high CB bank reserves. In Europe only a few countries have a potential problem—the usual suspects—but northern countries have extremely low government debt. The ECB holds more than €10 trillion in bank reserves, mostly coming from private savings. Banks get 4% and pay 1%—it’s a money tree. Now, that’s an unsustainable problem right there I think.

Here in the Netherlands we boosted the Covid economy with €100 billion, increasing the debt to GDP ratio from 43% to 52%. Five years later we’re back at 43%.

Germany installed a debt brake (debt ceiling) 15 years ago. Resulting in underspending and underinvestment—its economy is in shambles, infrastructure needs upgrading, digitization is rudimentary, etc.

France is as usual a mess. No fiscal discipline! Debt to GDP ratio like the US around 120%. But France has high speed trains, nuclear power stations all over the country, an operative and earnest military, naval industry building subs, aerospace industry building jets, etc. and it’s a happy country.

Check out my essay and tell me your view:

https://open.substack.com/pub/ed12621126/p/stop-agonizing-about-the-national?r=5ch0o6&utm_medium=ios

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