GDP %100
GNI %75 ... %25 short unable to consume GDP
Introduce %25 interest free and consume GDP then cancel the %25. ... Sorted. (GNI= Gross National Income and GDP= Gross Nationa Product)
GDP %100
GNI %75 ... %25 short unable to consume GDP
Introduce %25 interest free and consume GDP then cancel the %25. ... Sorted. (GNI= Gross National Income and GDP= Gross Nationa Product)
And when those expenses go up I buy less items and store what's left under the mattress because the prices are gonna keep going up. Maybe you're more indicative of a shopper than I am.
If my million $ hammer is just an excuse to print more money, then every single product that is produced is just an excuse to produce more money. Something I happen to accept quite willingly as the truth. I never said that we'd be printing money.
You're really hung up on me printing money when that's not what I'm advocating at all. People can charge whatever they like for their product, Ocean said so.
I didn't think!!! I experimented!!!
Exactly, many factors affect GDP, money printing is but a very minor one. There is no reason to say increasing GDP requires more money to be printed or laundered.
No, because other products will actually be purchased at said value. Nobody is going to buy a million dollar hammer in a free market. 'selling' a million dollar hammer in a virtual local economy is just a way to cook the books for the international one, which is just like printing money. Try and go through the example and pinpoint exactly where the money is coming from to buy those million dollar hammers.
You just said before "Tis the same as minting a $1 trillion platinum coin and paying off a chunk of debt", if that is not the case, then provide a clear example as to where else the money comes from.
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
Great teachers do this. The rest just follow the book.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
I didn't think!!! I experimented!!!
I didn't think!!! I experimented!!!
Yet that's what we do. There must be a reason for it. My fave be that peeps ain't spendin.
That hammer could be purchased by X number of individuals in a day, or whatever frequency is used. It is a way to cook the books, but the idea is to do it as a part of a whole and not to get rid of debt. We're making a hammer and the computer will buy and sell that hammer on behalf of those who have the money in their accounts at the time, even if that means we credit your account with that $1 million for the millisecond it takes to make the transaction. It's how it happens, but the pricing is more realistic. It makes debt levels manageable without affecting the progress that human beings can make i.e. you want 2 teachers in a class, then "cook the books" so that the numbers stack up and the result is that you have 2 teachers in the class. What's more important? Cooking the books (which is really just a revaluation) to get the extra teachers in the class or sticking with the current methods and shifting money from one budget to another and still not getting another teacher in the class?
It is the case for you as you equated the two in a strict manner. I said it can be looked at either way i.e. either a hammer that costs $1 million or a token that is offsetting the creation of new money. Either way it works, but one has inflationary implications a you say and the other doesn't. Hence the two examples, the platinum coin and the Jackson Pollock.
I didn't think!!! I experimented!!!
Indeed, it's why getting peeps to spend (increasing GDP) is seen as a good thing for the economy. I think you now understand that GDP increase is not money printing/laundering?
I'm not talking about internal resource allocation, I'm talking about what you said wrt our country's debt "a hammer made locally could "cost" $1 million and the "profit" from that could go to paying off the debt." Are you saying you now understand why this would not work?
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
I don't remember saying that GDP was money printing or laundering. I did say that money printing would help go towards GDP as it will be spent. I consider the creation of money money laundering.
Of course not. If the hammer costs $2 to produce but we value it at $1 million and it is bought, does none of the GST go towards the govt?
Create a new position and fill it... after a suitable length of time that is.
I didn't think!!! I experimented!!!
So just for the record, you now know that increasing GDP is not money laundering?
For GST to be applicable, you have to have the money come from a sub-entity of the economy, person or company; which means said sub entity must value a hammer at 1million dollars to decide to pay for it. The absurdity of that line of thinking is nobody will pay 1million dollars for a hammer that costs $2 to produce.
And even if they did, or you forced them to, that is not creating wealth, it is just taking wealth off people in the society to pay the foreign debt.
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
But the rest of society don't support them, that's the point, they're penalised for their productivity. And I'm afraid if by "equitable" you mean spending more on underachievers, or any other minority group then you're use of the word is the opposite of that given by most reputable authorities. Do you have references showing that spending more on the lower end performers is more productive that spending it on high performers? 'Cause I'm pretty sure that's crap.
Investing heavily in other high achievers to produce cleaning machinery.
The days of paying for labour are all but gone, if you want a job best you rethink that underwater tofu weaving course and get yourself some tech qualifications.
And as I've already said; the end of civilisation is under far more threat from the comfortably average citizen in his artificially supported existence than any peasant revolt. When there's some benefit in achieving production over the bare average then you'll get improvements in productivity, and not until.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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