rpwi
Member
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2012
- Messages
- 1,049
No. The Fed doesn't 'manage' the money supply. They manage their asset base and they manage the methods and the rate at which they create and destroy money...but that is just the fringe end of the money supply. And of course they regulate and bailout the banking industry. They're not bossing around where the dollars in my wallet go though. Once they spend dollars...they are largely out-of-sight in a financial and regulatory sense.Ok, the fundamental issue is that you just don't understand that the very existence of a central-bank is for the purpose of managing moneysupply so not showing moneysupply on the B/S is out of the question,
It is not loan...because the community didn't create it, would receive no legal benefits in bankruptcy, and receives no interest on it and can not convert it for anything. It is base money...not a loan. Loans are always payable in something that is not the loan...what are fed bank deposit liabilities payable in?when it buys, it injects new money into the system, now the asset they buy must go on Assets side & therefore the money paid is accounted as Liabilities because it's been created out of nothing & therefore considered a "loan" from the community for reducing their purchasing-power
You used the term buy and not finance. This undermines your argument. In accrual accounting purchases are ALWAYS asset swaps. There are no liabilities to account for. Very easy to fix this using my accounting. The money has to be first recorded as an asset and as a credit to earnings. THEN can the new asset be swapped for t-bills.when it buys assets with new money to increase moneysupply, Assets go on the Assets side & the new money HAS TO go on the Liabilities side; it's just simple to understand if one looks at it objectively but I suppose it gets difficult when one believes in all kinds of conspiracies
The balance sheet is for determining profit...and doesn't really have any other purpose. Certainly the MB should be tracked and recorded...but not as a balance-sheet item. In the same way a bird-watcher tracks and records birds. Not on a B/S because it doesn't determine profit to himself.Again, there's no question of recording moneysupply separately because the very purpose of central-bank is to manage moneysupply so moneysupply must be shown on the B/S
A B/S always has the same purpose. Plus there is little conceptual difference between a central bank and a not-for profit counterfeiter that hands over profits to the government.Comparing a central-bank's B/S with any other corporations is like comparing apples & oranges; they have completely different goals & purposes
Can you name one conspiracy theory I have espoused? (not that is a bad thing...I just haven't done so in this thread)you have bought into the conspiracy theories too much
I'm the advocate for accrual accounting. An accounting method for financial transactions that is VERY status-quo and widely accepted manner. You apparently are in opposition of accrual accounting...so if anybody is the conspiracy nut...it is you.& therefore you feel troubled by the fact that the new money is recorded as Liability & that's all there is too this whole drama while I choose to look at the issue more objectively so there's a fundamental disconnect between our worldviews, which seems irreconcilable so no point in carrying on with this
No... I can create a 10 zillion dollar loan to myself...balanced by a 10 zillion dollar credit. Does the economy care? No. Why on earth should the economy care if a government loan to itself disappears? It is not logical in the least. Furthermore the terminology 'default' is not exact. Government is in charge of both ends. Congress could pass a bill directing the Fed to donate it's t-bills to treasury department. Same thing.P S It's irrelevant what you or Ron Paul or anyone has in mind, if US defaults on ANY debt then that will scare the debt-holders & the markets, as it will be seen as more fiscal instability & heightened risk of more defaults then debt-dumping, inflation & budget-crisis & debt-crisis will only be aggravated; you may disagree that's fine because future is uncertain & markets react in different ways at different times but there's little doubt that the debt-holders aren't going to be very happy about it & a debt-default of any kind could have serious consequences on the US economy