katie tully
ashleey luvs roosters
Which FB group, jack daniels simon?
NVM, I'll look at your profile and it'll tell me
NVM, I'll look at your profile and it'll tell me
Two thingsThe Austrian explanation fits the facts better than other theories
I mean a system where the government doesn't control so many aspects of the currency. A system where people are free to print and use whatever currency they want, start whatever banks they want - and let the market decide what currency will be used. Here's a link to the free banking wiki
When the government issues the currency and makes people use that specific currency, via stuff like legal tender laws, Australian Bank Notes Tax Act 1910, capital gains tax, land tax - it circumvents the natural free market "check systems" that exist. Because in a free market when a private currency issuer just starts printing money like crazy, people who don't want to have a devalued dollar can simply switch to another currency. With the existence of state legislation and rules, that becomes impossible to do, so the people are forced to live with a currency that loses spending power quickly. Inflation (referring to the expansion in money supply, not CPI), is a hidden tax on savings.
The government meddling with the currency is what caused this "myopia" of the actuaries and banks, by artificially making more money available than what there should have been. In Austrian economics, the determination of interest rates is generally based on how much more you want something now vs how much extra you'd have to be paid in the future to get more than that. eg. "do you prefer $100 now or $108 in a years time?" It's a time preference thing.
When the government "prints money", they are making interest rates lower than what they would otherwise be, which creates malinvestment. Since many calculations regarding investment are required in a society as complex as ours, you can see why such a thing is so crucial to the function of the economy. And since the underlying interest rate was incorrect, the calculations were wrong and resources have not been allocated where they were most needed.
The existence of other regulations contributed to it too:
- Community reinvestment act - made it easier to give unsustainable loans
- freddie and fannie
Contrary to what Rudd says, this crisis is not about greed. This crisis is fundamentally due to the government control over currency.
You calling me a HSC Kid?lol @ the hsc kids itt who don't understand how ppl can give non-keynsian explanations of economics
Of course you would, it appears after all that you're a career student.You calling me a HSC Kid?
Plus, i blame Neo-classical economics for this whole mess
I was waiting for someone to pull that card.Of course you would, it appears after all that you're a career student.
I know right.House is still sitting. It's expected to vote on the bills at 5am.
$42 billion of expenditure really demands better scrutiny than this.
seriously though, why the fuck are you still going to uni?I was waiting for someone to pull that card.
i consider it, a change in direction rather than career student.
He wants to be an Eco Warrior.seriously though, why the fuck are you still going to uni?
is it really that hard to let go?
it's more like spinning around on the spot then isn't itI was waiting for someone to pull that card.
i consider it, a change in direction rather than career student.
I'm not sure what your point here is. Yes, I'm arguing that the government prints too much money and circumvents the free market checks that exist. If you're talking about the definition of inflation, that's just because in Austrian economics "inflation" means expansion in the currency. The rise in prices is just a necessary consequence of expanding money supply.1- printing money only results in inflation - more money chasing after the same amount of goods leads to prices generally rising.
Which is why people would switch away from that currency if the creator just printed too much. Which goes back to my point about the free market check system of people switching to another currency being stopped by the state.2- Why would I or anyone accept money for goods and services if there was a real possibility that noone else would accept that money?
Problem is, the currencies of the world are all being printed by central banks, it's hard to use sound money. In the USA, private use of sound money has been policed and invaded, eg. Ron Paul dollar.And to an extent it is possible anyway - Theres nothing stopping me paying you in US dollars if we both accept it but because it isn't legal tender you have the right to reject it. In fact in most places you travel throughout the world $US are readily accepted. Removing legal tender would only result in unnecesarry instability throughout the economy - from the grocery store to international trade.
Just on that;"This is what happens when you have Labor governments, they always drive the country into debt, It's only when Liberal governments are elected that we have to clean up the mess." - Liberal George Brandis.