a central bank is like a heart. its purpose is to quicken and slow down according to the needs of the body. an athlete's heart responds to activity needs faster and also has a lower base metabolism. a fatty has high blood pressure, anemia, or a tendency to heart attacks
the weakness here is that the entry point into the economy is where the bonds are rehydrated. the owners of the bonds who now have excess (printed...) cash. this excess flow is probably redirected elsewhere into the stock market instead of being spent locally
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even if the money is injected directly into checking accounts it may still end up flowing into the stock market or other forms of crystallized money. at the end of the day, the heart is a pump. it can do no more than its job.
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this system is made or broken by a key assumption. that increased blood flow puts more cells to work. if increased money does not actually increase employment (or that employment is fake employment that doesn't provide value) then the system is broken
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high blood pressure for example does not help with blockages despite it logically making sense that more pressure is "good" for a blockage. the strain of the extra flow causes more damage than it fixes. probably through the creation of bullshit jobs.
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an obese person w/ metabolic syndrome similarly cannot increase heart rate and lose fat easily. (just as caffeine pills are not the most healthy way to lose weight) the issue is w/ insulin response, not heart/metabolism.
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shouting 'go go go just one more' to yourself at the gym doesn't help you lose weight (except painfully and slowly at best) and may even make things worse as you "reward" yourself for a job well done. the issue is insulin, make-up of diet. not calories.https://twitter.com/a_yawning_cat/status/1361836142245466112?s=20 …
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carbs/protein/fat can prolly map to cash/capital/skills somehow but that's an analogy for another day. to wrap up this thread, an interesting question to ask is "what does it mean for a central bank to be in debt?"
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debt is when it sells bonds remember. it gives out IOUs and in exchange gets a bunch of cash along with an "incentive" to make interest payments. but the bank literally makes the money. it doesn't give a fuck. it just wants cash out of the system.
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to a central bank, an asset is sth like a bond because it implies external economic activity. blood is pumping. cash however, is a LIABILITY. blood pooling in the heart is not indicative of wealth. it's indicative of a corpse.
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so "debt" to a central bank, as a surplus of liabilities, is strangely... having too much cash.
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End of conversation
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