It doesn't cost any more to store bits or paper in Europe now than it did when interest rates were positive. The "storage costs" metaphor as a justification for negative interest rates is a whopping falsehood.
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Sure, and people still use that stuff, but I also think you can think of robbers, highwaymen and pirates as a form of negative rates. And if people started holding more cash, there would be more robbers, highwaymen and pirates, meaning deeper implied negative rates on cash.
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So negative interest rates are a form of theft. Thank you for that admission.
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I'm not, personally, a fan of NIRP. I don't think it accomplishes what it sets out to do. But I don't think it's theft. And I don't think it's laws against holding physical currency (or metals or whatever) that explains why people don't opt to do that.
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You just likened negative interest to several enumerated forms of theft. P.S. hundreds of millions of people opt for paper for various transactions. As NIRP spreads & deepens, as bank fees etc. climb, the number of people using paper and number of txs they use it for will grow.
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No, I said that paying a bank for storage is a way to avoid theft. And see my other message. If you pay a security guard to protect your stuff from theft also a form of theft?
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You said a great deal more than that, which readers can see for themselves.
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Ok, well I'm genuinely not trying to play games or win a debate.
End of conversation
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