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Fiat Fiat

05-20-2017 , 08:40 PM
Fiat. Petrodollar.

Someone else add content please.
05-20-2017 , 08:50 PM
Dude get help
05-20-2017 , 08:52 PM
Quote:
For a small but committed group of economists, academics, and activists who adhere to a doctrine called Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), though, #mintthecoin was the tip of the economic iceberg. The possibility of a $1 trillion coin represented more than mere monetary sophistry: It drove home their foundational point that fiat currency is a social construct, and that there are therefore no fiscal limits on how much a sovereign currency-issuing nation can spend.

According to this small but increasingly vocal cohort of economists, including Bernie Sanders’s former chief economic adviser, once we change the way we think about money, we can provide for everyone: We don’t have to “find” the money to “pay” for universal health care by “cutting” the budget elsewhere. In fact, our government already works that way: Spending must precede taxation, or there would be no dollars in the economy to tax. It’s the political will to spend on certain things, not the money to afford it, that’s lacking.
Quote:
To a layperson, MMT can seem dizzyingly complex, but at its core is the belief that most of us have the economy backward. Conventional wisdom holds that the government taxes individuals and companies in order to fund its own spending. But the government—which is ultimately the source of all dollars, taxed or untaxed—pays or spends first and taxes later. When it funds programs, it literally spends money into existence, injecting cash into the economy. Taxes exist in order to control inflation by reducing the money supply, and to ensure that dollars, as the only currency accepted for tax payments, remain in demand.

It follows that currency-issuing governments could (and, depending on how you lean politically, should) spend as much as they need to in order to guarantee full employment and other social goods. MMT’s adherents like to point out that the federal government never “runs out” of money to fund the military, but routinely invokes budget constraints to justify defunding social programs. Money, in other words, isn’t a scarce commodity like silver or gold. “To people who’ve worked in financial markets, who work at the Fed, this isn’t controversial at all,” says Galbraith, who, while not an adherent, can certainly be described as “MMT-friendly.”
https://www.thenation.com/article/th...netary-theory/
05-20-2017 , 08:57 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by fatkid
Dude get help
I directly asked for help. Feel free to educate me.
05-20-2017 , 09:15 PM
05-20-2017 , 09:19 PM
05-20-2017 , 09:29 PM
Fiat makes these. Pretty sweet. The back doors open all the way around and a pallet of solar panels forks right up in there.



also, good post Huehue.
05-20-2017 , 11:41 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by campfirewest
If Mr. Bean were Italian this would be his ride.
05-21-2017 , 07:19 AM
Just the best thread guys.

      
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