The scary thing is many Americans believe in Modern Monetary Theory which claims that the US can print money indefinitely because it's a reserve currency and fiat currency.
Now's the best time to take out loans and mortgages and lock in interest rates before they go up. It's strange but debt is becoming an asset and cash and savings are a liability due to the USD's depreciation.
I do not really understand it myself, the Modern Monetary Theory.
There probably is a really difference that we should acknowledge.
MMT provides credit, this credit comes from the state.
In the old days, this credit came from bankers or rich people. The state would borrow from the bankers or rich people.
The state, now having gotten some money, goes does what it wants. The usual expectation is to build roads, hospitals, schools, or lend it to industry.
The idea is where does this credit come from, the bankers rich people or MMT. And this credit is to do domestic initiatives, such as public goods or build up some domestic industries.
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I guess a philosophic question is whether the state should be allowed to create credit? Why not? Isn't that what China has been doing for thousands of years?
If the state creates credit and gives out loans, that is not really too different than the current practise of the banking system in western countries creating credit and giving out loans.
The key point, theoretically speakings, is how this credit is applied in the general economy.
The state would like to see this credit applied to productive areas.
Nowadays, the credit created by American banks or by Janet & Jerome MMT, that all mostly goes to the financial markets and 1% according to rumour.
It's a rumour because no one really understands this stuff and what they are really doing.