So you don't understand the propensity for inflation has been from debasing the currency? Sure there is usually some inflation/deflation in the normal market, but as it's been for the past 100 years, we have seen mostly inflation.So prices would never rise again? Cool. How does that work? No more supply/ demand where a shortage can't make prices go up?
Lol. So jobs in banking are no longer jobs?
So you don't understand the propensity for inflation has been from debasing the currency? Sure there is usually some inflation/deflation in the normal market, but as it's been for the past 100 years, we have seen mostly inflation.
But it could allow for some deflation, something we haven't seen for a long, long time. Us old folks, on a fixed income, are really tired of being robbed of our life savings.It is a factor, no doubt- but getting rid of "printing" more money won't mean no price inflation either.
Consumers spending say $1 million would create far more jobs than putting $1 million in some bank. It takes no more workers to store that money than before but if a business has $1 million more in sales they are definately going to need more help.
It is a factor, no doubt- but getting rid of "printing" more money won't mean no price inflation either.
So prices would never rise again? Cool. How does that work? No more supply/ demand where a shortage can't make prices go up?
But the other side of that is that you're creating a bubble. When savers are literally getting less than 1%, they are forced to put their money into ventures that wouldn't normally attract them otherwise.
Or as Ron Paul would say, it leads to malinvestment...
Which actually kinda supports what she said- low rates will encourage more investment in job creation activities. Your buying more trees and fuel helps the grower and the energy seller. They have more money to spend on things and might also hire more workers to help the increase in business. Putting it in the bank doesn't directly create any jobs. Spending it does.
So the banker doesn't lend it out for investments but puts it under his mattress?
A company won't borrow money to invest in new jobs and production unless he thinks there is a demand for that extra productivity. That is why banks are sitting on about $2 trillion in unlent money right now (under their proverbial mattress) and that money isn't creating jobs. Money at the bank is not productive money. Money being spent is. You do need savings to have money to lend out but you also need demand for goods for companies to want to borrow those funds. How many banking jobs has that $2 trillion they now have created?
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/EXCSRESNS
If any of the banks gets too big in the council's determination, they could be regulated by the Federal Reserve, which can ask a bank to increase its reserve requirement—the money it has 'saved up' and is not using for lending or business costs.
Doesn't government create jobs with that money?
What changes occured in reserve requirements due to Dodd Frank?
http://www.cnbc.com/id/47075854
No reserve requirements have been changed under this Act so far. The Fed did EASE reserve requirement at the beginning of the economic crisis (lowering the requirement from ten to seven percent for some), but has left them unchanged since then. No- that has nothing to do with the excess reserves banks have piled up.
The DFA stress tests are a set of forward-looking exercises conducted both by the Federal Reserve and by financial companies regulated by the Federal Reserve. The stress tests were mandated by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and are intended to ensure institutions have sufficient capital to absorb losses and support operations during adverse economic conditions so that they do not pose risks to their communities, other institutions, or the broad economy.
http://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/dfa-stress-tests.htm
The most noted from the investor perspective has been the trillion dollars or so that have gone to boost share prices through buybacks. That trend has been especially pronounced in light of the relatively tame levels of capital expenditures, particularly when measured as a share of total revenue. Companies bought back about $115 billion just since mid-December according to market data firm TrimTabs.
Investors increasingly have demanded—as expressed through sentiment gauges such as the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey—that companies start using their cash to invest in growth rather than simply returning money to shareholders.
Corporate cash rose to a record $1.98 trillion in the fourth quarter, according to Fed data.
The combination of hoarding cash while continuing to raise debt and not invest in growth has spurred concern about whether companies are using the low-rate opportunity wisely.
"The mantra to always remember is debt is a tax on future income," Steve Blitz, chief economist at ITG Investment Research, said in an interview. "Right now it's an extraordinarily low tax, so they all want to go and buy stocks. It's a reasonable, rational act, but at some point this has to turn to capex."
Which actually kinda supports what she said- low rates will encourage more investment in job creation activities. Your buying more trees and fuel helps the grower and the energy seller. They have more money to spend on things and might also hire more workers to help the increase in business. Putting it in the bank doesn't directly create any jobs. Spending it does.