rpwi
Member
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2012
- Messages
- 1,049
You are stuck pointing out that the grass is green, while I'm trying to explain to you that I already know this and that my point is the sky is blue. Are you familiar with accrual accounting? The core concepts are that when you purchase something you just swap assets...and when you increase your wealth from non-financing sources, you increase retained earnings (equity). In orders for dollars to be a liability, the dollars would have to be loaned from the banks to the Fed. The banks didn't create those dollars, so they can't loan them to the fed. Yes...the accounting 'adds up' with the status quo...but it is incorrect because dollars are credited to liabilities instead of equity.when they buy something, they inject new money into the economy & when they sell their assets, they withdraw/destroy money from the economy; therefore by the very nature of things, the assets they buy must go on Assets side & the money they create must go on the Liabilities side & I've also cited reasons why it does, that's how their accounting HAS TO BE in order to reflect their position
Who said anything about a conspiracy theory (as if that is a bad thing)? I have yet to find another person who is making the same argument that I am (that the liabilities assigned to MB belong instead to equity).From some of your previous posts in many other threads, I thought you were looking for an honest & objective view on things but I guess you buy too much into conspiracy theories & therefore you're unable to look at the issue objectively, as is the case with most people on this forum & elsewhere & because of which, Ron Paul & the whole movement loses a lot of credibility; but anyways, so as things stand, I don't see the point in carrying on,
That's why you are confused. This entire thread you have been arguing the wrong arguments and assuming I'm arguing a position I am not. Your scope is too narrow...I understand fully how the Fed currently accounts for MB creation...I understand why they do this...I understand that is adds up in a black and white sense. I'm taking a step back and analyzing IF it should be done in this way. I've repeatedly demonstrated why...to which case you ignore what I write...and parrot simple Fed ledger entries. Because you don't understand what I'm arguing, this has given you false confidence and false exasperation. In your mind, you must repeat the same arguments, when in fact you need to take a step back and realize the argument was not what you thought it was.if someone were objective enough they'd have gotten their answers by now with respect to why central-banks account the way they do
You just blew off a fairly significant question that would go some ways on your part in understanding what truly I've been talking about all along. HOW would you account for the government defaulting on t-bills owed to the Fed? Ledger entries and all?It's not realistic for Treasury to default on its Treasuries with the Fed because Fed is owned by the government, it receives Fed's profits so the government also stands to bear Fed's losses so they'll have to cover the losses & that's why wiping out Fed-held debt isn't that easy; such a "default" would be pointless in essence because it's the money that government owes to itself, the only thing it will accomplish is to probably throw the markets & the economy into a turmoil
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