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120 sats \ 7 replies \ @Undisciplined 18 Nov \ on: MONEY CLASS OF THE DAY: Central Banks Are Insolvent—Clownery or Nothingburger? econ
The Fed taking these seemingly unbounded losses has been really hard for me to wrap my head around.
Is this going to be something (like the persistent unpayable debt) that becomes normalized and people will look at you like you're the lunatic if you mention it?
probably, probably.
None of this (QE the balance sheet up; inflation and interest rate crashing prices etc) will ever happen again, no??
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Do you have a decent understanding of how this works?
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Yes and no. I do not understand the inner workings or accounting details of any of this.
But what I do understand is that money is just a promise, and the government can get people to do stuff using these promises... as long as people continue to trust the promise.
As to whatever is going on in the books and behind the scenes, it only matters to the extent that it does or doesn't break peoples' trust. The numbers could be totally be made up out of thin air, but as long as people keep trusting the government, this deranged game can keep going on and on and on.
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The numbers could be totally be made up out of thin air
Sort of. When the numbers are positive, it's reasonably clear what's going on: the Fed is transferring the profits from their bond holdings to the Treasury.
However, when the number is negative, the Treasury isn't transferring loss compensation back to the Fed. Those losses are real economic losses, though, which means they have an incidence somewhere in the economy.
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none of this makes any sense.
how can the fed print money out of thin air... buy bonds then transfer the 'profits' from those bonds... back to the treasury from which they bough them.
the fed doesn't have money, it just prints it.
and sending the 'profits' back to the treasury implies that that money came from somewhere...
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this chart on the left... looks funny
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