- 09 Oct 2023 20:15
#15290098
That would be equal to the Argentine government selling bonds to their own Central Bank. The Central Bank needs to issue new currency to buy those bonds. It's equal to printing money.
Then there will be inflation. That inflation will push up interest rates even higher (though of course not on the government bonds that the Central Bank holds). If the Central Bank attempts to continue to hold down interest rates at that level, in the face of inflationary pressure from the market, it will cause more inflation, even more than it did before. (The difference between what the free market wants to set interest rates at and what the Central Bank is trying to set interest rates at will dictate what the inflation is in that situation) It can turn into a vicious spiral, which quickly spirals out of control. I believe this has already been happening in Argentina. It explains why inflation happened so fast.
When rising interest rates are fueled by inflation, there's really no way for the Central Bank to hold those interest rates down long-term, and definitely not in a quickly accelerating inflationary spiral like Argentina.
If the Central Bank tries, they will just get hyperinflation.
Steve_American wrote:In the video I just saw with Mosler, he said that raising interest rates to 90% just increases inflation to 90% so, soon the Gov. must raise rates to 97%. So, it is endless.
Steve_American wrote:. . So, what happens if the Gov. just stops selling bonds and just spends, like Mosler suggests?
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That would be equal to the Argentine government selling bonds to their own Central Bank. The Central Bank needs to issue new currency to buy those bonds. It's equal to printing money.
Then there will be inflation. That inflation will push up interest rates even higher (though of course not on the government bonds that the Central Bank holds). If the Central Bank attempts to continue to hold down interest rates at that level, in the face of inflationary pressure from the market, it will cause more inflation, even more than it did before. (The difference between what the free market wants to set interest rates at and what the Central Bank is trying to set interest rates at will dictate what the inflation is in that situation) It can turn into a vicious spiral, which quickly spirals out of control. I believe this has already been happening in Argentina. It explains why inflation happened so fast.
When rising interest rates are fueled by inflation, there's really no way for the Central Bank to hold those interest rates down long-term, and definitely not in a quickly accelerating inflationary spiral like Argentina.
If the Central Bank tries, they will just get hyperinflation.