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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: carranza2 who wrote (169134)3/4/2021 3:12:27 PM
From: sense  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217734
 
They say that inflation is a hidden tax... and that's true... making it worth asking, who is that tax paid to ?

But, if inflation is a hidden tax... so is QE... as the wealth transfer doesn't occur by "money printing'... but by "debt printing". QE is not "money created out of thin air"... as it would be if it were money printing. Instead, it is money created out of an obligation... in the form of a debt... which transfers money to the banks... and transfers the obligation of having created it... as debts owed by you.

QE is the banks taking the asset in free money... and handing you the liability for having created it.

So, its the banks stealing from you, first, burying you in debt to pay for their theft, second, and then taxing you... WITH INTEREST... to pay for what they stole...

Money printing... would be WAY better than that ? But, that's not a limit, still ? Because it is the government that is letting them do that... but not just that ? The government also is a participant in the scam. It's not just QE that is being imposed on you as a debt... that's only the "bank portion" of the debt being handed to you... there's also a "government portion"...

The government portion includes "stimulus"... so, they obligate you to pay more debts to cover their spending... and give you a little bit of cash... which is a much smaller amount than you've just borrowed in order to get that cash... "Stimulus" means you took $100 out of an ATM on your credit card... the government took $90 of that, and gave you $10 "to spend however you want"...

Time vs. growth of the government debt... and the QE debt ?

Here's the "rosy scenario" presented in 2017, in which "it seems it works"... with $20 trillion in debt and $4.5 trillion in QE... just as they start to "unwind" the QE... by taking a couple hundred billion back out of the system. And, that's a tiny reduction that got us to 2020... when the "Repo" market started showing us things were melting down because of removing $200 billion of $4.5 trillion ? Shockingly, it seems banks "can't handle" having the QE backed out... at all ?

So, up to March, 2020... when they quit talking about how much Repo was happening ? Then, "the Fed's balance sheet"... the measure of the amount of QE... stood at $4.31 trillion. And, as of November 2020... it was 7.24 trillion ? From 900 billion to 4.5 trillion, an add of 3.6 trillion, took 7 years... from 2008 to 2015... all just trying to paper over the financial black hole the banks created with frauds in mortgage markets in a scam that exploded in 2008... which they're making you pay for. And, then, winding it back from 4.5 trillion to 4.3 trillion "caused a recession" the banks say ? But ramping it up from $4.3 trillion to $7.24 trillion, an add of 2.94 trillion... took only 8 months ? From an average of $43 billion a month between 2008 and 2015... to an average of $367.5 billion per month by September 2020... QE... only 8.5 times faster...

Will giving banks more wealth FASTER... work better ?

Can you feel it working ?

Meanwhile, the debt has grown in the same time... from "only" $20 trillion in 2017... to $28 trillion now... but the debt clock shows it is growing at more than $3 trillion per year now...even before Biden tacks on the $2 trillion in new "stimulus" BEFORE ramping up other spending.

The per citizen share of the QE, so far, is $21,927...

The per citizen share of the new 2 trillion dollar stimulus... $6,057... is what goes on your credit card.

How big is that check you're getting... to pay that $6,000 debt ? And, as rates rise... what will it cost ?

Should we ignore the "per taxpayer" math versus the "per citizen" math ?




To: carranza2 who wrote (169134)3/4/2021 5:44:24 PM
From: TobagoJack2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Haim R. Branisteanu
sense

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217734
 
In the fiat money inflation in France script the stimies mechanism was much more direct - print, and make the paper tokens useful to buy stolen Church property which were donated (taxed) out of the population over a long time span, liberate the values encapsulating memories of labours saved from works past.

Presumably some lent and others borrowed the stimies.

The process that Sense described is not as direct, but mathematically ends us in the same place, not a terribly good place, just a terrible place.

All baked in, awaiting taste test.

Policy measures now, if under enlightened and astute leadership, as opposed to more of the same with socialism slapped on, might narrow the interregnum of darkness, but interregnum is where we are headed, everywhere.

But, never mind, as stimies are and shall be dispensed, liberally or conservatively, because “there is no choice” we shall be told, as we once were during the dress rehearsal, so we best try to benefit from such before we enter the interregnum.



W/r to << 4. After the Fall. Investigators begin to sift through the meltdown's rubble. Shaken world leaders question the very foundations of modern capitalism while asking: could it all happen again?>>

I am guessing “yes, only worse, and much worse”. How else can it all turn out?

topdocumentaryfilms.com

The Secret History of the Global Financial Collapse
180 min
Doc Zone has traveled the world - from Wall Street to Dubai to China - to investigate The Secret History of the Global Financial Collapse. Meltdown is the story of the bankers who crashed the world, the leaders who struggled to save it and the ordinary families who got crushed.

September 2008 launched an extraordinary chain of events: General Motors, the world’s largest company, went bust. Washington Mutual became the world's largest bank failure. Lehman Brothers became the world’s largest bankruptcy ever - The damage quickly spread around the world, shattering global confidence in the fundamental structures of the international economy.

Meltdown also tells the stories of desperate foreclosed homeowners in California, disillusioned autoworkers at the end of the line in Ontario and furious workers in France who shocked the world by kidnapping their own bosses.

1. The Men Who Crashed the World. Greed and recklessness by the titans of Wall Street triggers the largest financial crash since the Great Depression. It's left to US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, himself a former Wall Street banker, to try and avert further disaster.

2. A Global Tsunami. The meltdown's devastation ripples around the world from California to Iceland and China. Facing economic ruin, desperate world leaders are at each other's throats.

3. Paying the Price. The victims of the meltdown fight back. In Iceland, protesters force a government to fall. In Canada, ripped off autoworkers occupy their plant. And in France, furious union members kidnap their bosses.

4. After the Fall. Investigators begin to sift through the meltdown's rubble. Shaken world leaders question the very foundations of modern capitalism while asking: could it all happen again?



To: carranza2 who wrote (169134)3/4/2021 8:43:54 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217734
 
velocity should head up as proto-UBI takes hold, leading to all-out-UBI

elsewhere, mathematically-speaking, UBI is called socialism

as UBI requires funding, and funding must come from somewhere, we can guess at the prospective sources of funding

gold is very cheap and getting cheaper, a happy event

economist.com

Might the pandemic pave the way for a universal basic income?
A true UBI seems far off. But more experimentation is likely

Mar 2nd 2021
WHEN ANDREW YANG began his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, his proposal for a “Freedom Dividend”—monthly cash payments of $1,000 to be paid to all Americans—distinguished him among a crowded field as an outsider and an unorthodox thinker. Nearly two years later, as Mr Yang leads the race for mayor of New York City, his plan to provide cash to half a million New Yorkers feels far less radical, and not just because it is much more modest than his idea for a national universal basic income (UBI).

Listen to this storyEnjoy more audio and podcasts on iOS or Android.

Though UBI still meets with scepticism in many quarters, the experience of the pandemic, and the accompanying explosion in social spending, have changed the tone of discussions about radical reforms to welfare states (see article). Cash transfers—like those deployed by many governments during the pandemic—have come to look like an efficient, effective way to meet any number of social needs. Few schemes during the pandemic offered recurring payments to all. Yet, though the age of the UBI has not dawned, the ordeal of covid-19 could have brought it closer.

Arguments for universal-income payments have flourished for centuries. Thomas Paine argued that the Earth is common property, and everyone who makes use of its land and resources owes society a “ground rent”, which should fund the payment of a “natural inheritance” to all adults. Plans for universal payments, and the subtly different idea of a guaranteed minimum income, were a recurring feature of welfare debates in the 20th century. Yet by the end of the century concerns about freeloading and persistently high rates of joblessness across much of Europe led to reforms that made benefits stingier or more contingent on work.

Worries about inequality and the belief—especially among tech types—that robots and artificial intelligence might soon make many workers redundant led to renewed interest in basic incomes in the 2010s. But realistic proposals were scant, Mr Yang’s plucky presidential bid notwithstanding. In 2016 a Swiss referendum on a plan to pay all adults an income of about $2,500 per month was soundly rejected, with nearly 80% of voters opposed.

Then came covid-19. Restrictions on activity placed huge swathes of society in a position of dire, urgent economic need. Governments around the world responded with a fire hose of cash. From mid-March to mid-June more than 1.1bn people received cash payments, much of which were approved with little political opposition. Cash transfers accounted for about a third of all pandemic-related social policies, according to the World Bank. America’s Congress passed a covid-relief act in March 2020 containing a provision to send no-strings-attached cheques of up to $1,200 to most adults by near-unanimous margins (another round of cheques followed at the end of the year).

Residents of Hong Kong received payments worth nearly $1,300; those in Japan about $930; most Singaporean adults roughly $425. Some governments experimented with payments that could be used only locally, through vouchers (as in Malta) or pre-loaded debit cards (as in parts of South Korea). But most simply sent cash.

Few if any of these schemes offered a true UBI, though. In the rich world, most cash-relief programmes were one-off transfers, aimed at stimulating consumption and cushioning against income shocks. In poor countries transfers more closely resembled a basic income, in that they were often recurrent. But most were aimed at the poor and vulnerable. In its biggest-ever welfare programme, the Brazilian government provided monthly payments to the poorest third of the population until December 2020. Togo’s scheme sends fortnightly transfers to the mobile wallets of informal workers where lockdowns are in place.

But as the end of the acute phase of the pandemic draws near, and normal economic activity slowly resumes, the number of programmes still in place is dwindling. Only 7% of policies have been extended; the average scheme lasted just three months, according to the World Bank. In America, President Joe Biden’s stimulus bill, which is working its way through Congress, makes provision for a third round of cheques, though fewer people will receive them than in 2020.

Pandemic assistance itself will not evolve into sustained basic-income schemes. But the world’s experience with covid-19 could still make their eventual adoption more likely. Polling suggests that young people in both America and Europe support UBI. Both Democrats and some Republicans have expressed support for an expanded child tax credit in America, which would provide cash with no strings attached to families on low incomes. Though benefits phase out for those on high incomes, the plan (which is part of Mr Biden’s relief bill) comes close to providing a basic income to families with children.

In South Korea, a presidential election contest scheduled for next year is shaping up to be a referendum of sorts on UBI. Lee Jae-myung, a potential candidate who as governor of the province of Gyeonggi oversaw a regional basic-income programme, suggests that South Korea should adopt a national-level UBI of 500,000 won ($430) per year, rising eventually to that same amount per month. (A possible rival for the presidency, Chung Sye-kyun, the current prime minister, opposes the plan.)

Pandemic experience also adds to a growing body of evidence on the effects of cash-transfer programmes. In response to the surge in interest in UBI, researchers and governments around the world launched a variety of experiments, at least some of which had begun to yield results before the arrival of covid-19. Finland, for example, conducted a trial in 2017-18 in which 2,000 randomly selected unemployed people were paid a modest income each month, roughly equivalent in size to unemployment benefits, which was guaranteed for the term of the trial.

Evidence from the experiment was muddied by a change to a law in 2018, which tightened conditionality for receiving unemployment benefits. Even so, the results are intriguing. Among the biggest worries relating to UBI is the possibility that it might discourage recipients from seeking paid work. Yet participants who received unconditional payments actually worked more than those on the dole. Reported well-being was substantially higher; recipients also registered less depression and stress, a higher degree of confidence in their abilities, and more social trust than did those in the control group.



The Finnish results are broadly consistent with findings from other experiments. Rebecca Hasdell, then of the Basic Income Lab at Stanford University, conducted a review of 16 basic-income studies published between 2009 and 2019 that covered rich and poor countries. The research provides consistent evidence of a positive effect on educational attainment and on measures of physical and mental health, and reduced poverty. Effects on labour-market participation are generally small; half of the studies that assess its impact do not find a statistically significant effect. Most of the rest find a positive effect, she writes.

Where participation does decline, though, it is often associated with an increase in caregiving, which could worsen gender inequality in the labour market. In low- and middle-income countries increased caregiving is often linked to lower workforce participation by women. In some studies, a basic income also seems to reduce participation by older workers.

In some cases the beneficial effects of UBI seem to have persisted through the pandemic. A team of economists that had begun a large-scale UBI experiment in Kenya before the outbreak of covid-19 was able to monitor its performance during the crisis. Recipients reported levels of well-being that were modestly but meaningfully higher than those of the control group. Effects on health outcomes were ambiguous. But people receiving payments were more likely to engage in risk-taking commercial activities: perhaps, the authors suggest, because of the insurance provided by the transfers. That suggests that even if basic incomes discourage some sorts of work, they may encourage other desirable activities, such as entrepreneurship.

Extrapolating from these findings is a fraught business. Studies of long-established systems with UBI-like features, such as Alaska’s Permanent Fund, which invests oil revenues and distributes dividends to the public, also indicate that the employment effects of a universal payment seem to be small (and may well be positive). But conclusions drawn from programmes that are limited in geographical or temporal scope may not fully capture the ways in which a large-scale, permanent UBI could affect society. Norms regarding work and leisure might adjust in ways that alter the response to payments—for good or ill.

Reality chequeBehaviour could shift as more members of society receive generous income payments: perhaps because of a “social multiplier effect” which reflects the fact that some activities become more enjoyable as more people engage in them. That is, UBI recipients in, say, the Finnish experiment might have been more inclined to seek work because being in work is more attractive (and not being in work less so) when most people are employed—a dynamic that could potentially change were income payments to become universal.

Still, encouraging results from UBI trials are likely to encourage more experimentation. They may also provide support to principles and policies that share features with a UBI without going the whole hog, such as: universality; a relaxed approach to the question of work incentives; or a guaranteed income to some groups, as Mr Yang now proposes. That is because the most daunting obstacle to fully fledged UBI programmes remains: the little matter of funding. Mr Yang’s original proposal for a UBI, for instance, would have cost about 14% of GDP a year, though the price tag could be partly reduced by rationalising other welfare schemes. (For comparison, overall federal spending amounted to 21% of GDP in 2019.) Neither short-term UBI trials nor mass cash transfers in response to covid-19 required governments to take on the difficult task of financing enormous new expansions to the welfare state.

Much of the aid provided to households over the past year has been financed with new government borrowing, up to and including Mr Biden’s proposals. As accommodating as markets have been of government borrowing over the past year, it seems unlikely that UBI dreams can be made real without the question of financing eventually being asked and answered.

Some politicians are beginning to grapple with the issue. Mr Lee reckons that a small UBI in South Korea could be paid for by adjusting the existing budget, but he allows that increasing the generosity of payments would require additional money. Taxes on land, carbon emissions and digital services are his preferred funding mechanisms. Mr Yang, for his part, argues that a combination of curbs to spending inefficiencies and philanthropic donations could pay for his proposed cash transfers (which would cover only the poorest New Yorkers).

But where the great welfare-state expansions of the mid-20th century were enabled by a spirit of solidarity and self-sacrifice, forged in depression and war, which made tax-financing of new benefits politically possible, the new enthusiasm for cash transfers owes more to a broad-based relaxation in concern about government borrowing. As the pandemic ends, that relaxed attitude may change as well, among some segments of the political spectrum at least. Only then can you learn how far along the path to a UBI the pandemic has actually moved society. ¦

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline "Cheques and balances"