He just keeps digging deeper and he's showing a Ben like tenacity wrt his digging deeper (and being wrong) for page after page after page...
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The Impossibility of Growth
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Originally posted by AAAAAAAAH! View Post1. Subsistence farmers don't need currency.
2. Someone else is receiving the interest. I still don't see why you think money is just going to disappear into some black void and we'll run out of money.
If the principal is never paid, then you're paying interest forever, for no other reason that someone holds a title over you. Hence serfdom, which is permanent debt with no growth.
If the principal is paid, money has to be resupplied through additional credit. But the interest money is never supplied by the creditor: you have to find it from other's credits, or by being a stakeholder of the interest (which is still someone else's debt).
New credit will be extended if there's a reasonable assumption that you can turn the money into something more valuable (so that interest can be paid). That little extra is bound, at a certain point, to imply resources of a material nature.
Loans from the bank's perspective are assets, and a bank's interest is to grow its assets as much as it can. This is why credit, growth, and material resources are inherently tied.
When a politician says we need growth, what he's really saying is that we should be increasing the bank's assets.
Which is not to deny that technological miracles will help us increase the efficiency of our production, reducing both our use of raw materials and the production of waste, as well as miniaturising many things which used to require a lot of resources and take up a lot of storage space. This is powerfully argued (and hopefully spruiked) by Diamandis and Kotler in their analysis of the power of new technological developments to ‘dematerialize’ growth. [Diamandis and Kotler 2012, p. 150ff] But dematerialisation is a slippery concept: reduction of material use is not elimination of material use, and just as with relative and absolute decoupling, the reduction in unit cost or size can be overcome by the growth in units. So a world of abundance without limit will eventually be a world crammed too full of perhaps tiny stuff, regardless of our technological progress.
This is the outcome of neverending credit to fuel the money supply.
Failing that, the other outcome is serfdom.Last edited by Fake Boris; June 7, 2014, 12:10.In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.
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Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostI didn't make myself clear enough: the money supply runs out as the principal is paid, not the interest per se. You're correct on this, but this doesn't give an accurate picture.
If the principal is never paid, then you're paying interest forever, for no other reason that someone holds a title over you. Hence serfdom, which is permanent debt with no growth.
If the principal is paid, money has to be resupplied through additional credit. But the interest money is never supplied by the creditor: you have to find it from other's credits, or by being a stakeholder of the interest (which is still someone else's debt).
New credit will be extended if there's a reasonable assumption that you can turn the money into something more valuable (so that interest can be paid). That little extra is bound, at a certain point, to imply resources of a material nature.
Loans from the bank's perspective are assets, and a bank's interest is to grow its assets as much as it can. This is why credit, growth, and material resources are inherently tied.
When a politician says we need growth, what he's really saying is that we should be increasing the bank's assets.
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Well that's the whole point isn't it?
Without credit, the economy would shrink and banks would fail. Shrinking doesn't have to be a disaster. There are more than enough resources for everyone anyway, even if the economy shrunk by 50%.
We need to devise a political and economic system that makes harmonious shrinking possible.In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.
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