Rich (Now with the Upper Middle Class)
10-12-2010
, 12:46 AM
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 3,366
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then, even if someone else does take advantage of it, the money they receive from the fed is still accessible by the bank because the money is deposited in the bank. you cant get away from the banks benefiting for the most part. this access for the bank is a benefit in two ways. for one, the receiving bank benefits because their direct ability to expand rises. then the other banks benefit because the overnight rates they depend so much on end up being cheaper due the increase supply of loanable funds.
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also we know dealers benefit strictly by their willingness to be involved in the process
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the fact that new money benefits its early receivers. this is so obviously true i cant believe we're arguing it.
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also what would be the effect to current banks if tomorrow the fed said they are stopping liquidity support to all banks and giving it rather to registered gambling houses only?
In short, your entire scenario is predicated on a false premise - there's no arbitrary distinction between "bank" and "registered gambling house" from the Fed's perspective. Pretty much anyone who's willing to abide by the Fed's rules already has access to the Fed's liquidity facilities. Anyone can organize their business to be a bank-holding company.
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lets talk about speculation in that everyone else in the rest of the economy can anticipate the new money so will force the prices of the items desired by the new money receiver to rise before he can spend it. due to human action, there is obviously no way to be certain here. but if you can predict where his demands will lay, you can invest whatever resources you have trying to take advantage. There are cases where everyone elses resources are limited however, and cannot take full advantage, and if they know exactly where he will go (something that is not the case ever).
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If the money supply expands 1000 and the initial money supply was 100, even if society diverted all their money to the resource they thought the expander would buy, they cannot bring the price up high enough to take away his benefit of an inflated balance
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(assuming no credit is used).
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Since the expander is really always getting something for nothing, he wins no matter how high the price assuming he can still outbid for something.
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aggregate transactions are one way of looking at spending.
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im not using your idea. there a similar features to the way you see it and i see it. i know many others who see it similarly too, whose views on this likely predate your existence. the IP is really a stupid place to venture especially because they idea has an essence, and was discovered not invented.
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PB, i think i have found a glaring error your interpretation. There is no such exchange as all the goods for money. Money is only demanded to extend barter conditions between varying goods and service exchanges. There is no relation of all the money to all the goods, since there is no case where one would give up all the goods to get all the money because they might as well keep the goods from the start. Money is not demanded as an end, its demanded as a medium. All goods would never go on sale for all the money because money demand depends on one's willingness to hold it, and one is only willing to hold it for the services money renders. Money does not provide any services for those who acquire all the goods for all the money.
http://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/11...regime-397397/
Bonus points to anyone finding my statements in that thread that I now disagree with!
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also, again, i never said prices cannot adjust before actual growth in m0. they just cant fully adjust and to adjust they leave gaping holes (to speculate on where one thinks new money will go one must make choices and diversions to engage in this speculation).
10-12-2010
, 09:33 AM
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 5,740
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And the grocery stores I go to are the only grocery stores who can directly deal with me. Neither relationship is any sort of permanent subsidy - I go to those grocery stores because they provide me with the most convenient access to the market for groceries. The Fed goes to those dealers they provide the Fed with the most conveient access to the market for treasuries. No one is excluded from starting such a business, any more than anyone is excluded from starting a grocery store next to where I live. If you have a good enough business, you become a primary dealer.
i know you didnt want to talk about the AIG bailout or other things like that but this is the point in case. you cant deny this. it is perfectly relevant. Firms undeserving in a collateral/business sense were handed large amounts of credit. i know many people who were in the same situation and were not afforded such chance. what differentiates the two are special privilege.
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Even if we accept your strange logic that banks as a whole have some supernatural ability to access "new money" regardless of who has it, then banks suffer just as much, because they must already control the "rest of the money" which has lost value proportionally. Either way, the above barely even parses.
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So I guess everyone benefits from taxation - they are willingly involved in the process much the same way that most people willingly pay taxes or shop at Walmart.
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So random sellers of the treasury benefit from monetary expansion. Again, we have established that sellers of treasuries are the early receivers of this great new money. So why not join the party?
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The entire economy would suffer, but effects would be fairly random. You're randomly mixing ideas though - the fed's liquidity support and the fed's use of open market operations to set interest rates are not related, except in some fairly technical sense that you don't understand and I won't bother to explain here. I undersatnd that you're largely playing a word-association game, but it wasn't until 2008 that primary dealers received any liquidity support from the Fed. Furthermore, liquidity support from the Fed isn't some kind of subsidy - it's largely a credit-based loan program available to institutions that abide by the Fed's rules. Registered gambling houses would have neither the collateral, nor the credit to access any of this at a favorable rate, even if the program was open exclusively to them.
and again, what about crap MBS which are mostly owned by the fed makes it good collateral? you are actually ridiculous, i hope you know that/
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Again, to the extent that you can't predict how this new money will shape prices in the future, you similarly don't know who will benefit. Capital markets are structured so that you can bet on things like this. You can even bet on the general price level.
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What? This is exactly what happens during hyperinflation. Society would anticipate and move prices well ahead of actual increase in money supply.
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If you assume away aspects of reality, don't be surprised when you get conclusions that are not relevant in reality.
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So sell your treasuries and get fresh new money.

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So, m0 is some sort of constraint in spending power and aggregate transactions are one way of looking at spending and it can be arbitrarily bigger than m0. So exactly what kind of constraint is m0? What does it constrain, how does it constrain and what does it constrain to?
It's not about IP - you couldn't follow basic algebra or distinguish between real and nominal values (90% of your objections were due to those errors), so there was no danger of you replicating any useful aspect of the model - I'm merely saying, given my familiarity with your history of posts on monetary policy, that the probable origin of that particular method of analysis is actually my model. You had a lot of trouble understanding why I formulated a relationship between money supply and nominal value of total amount of stuff in an economy, causing some oscillation between different modes of confusion.
It's not about IP - you couldn't follow basic algebra or distinguish between real and nominal values (90% of your objections were due to those errors), so there was no danger of you replicating any useful aspect of the model - I'm merely saying, given my familiarity with your history of posts on monetary policy, that the probable origin of that particular method of analysis is actually my model. You had a lot of trouble understanding why I formulated a relationship between money supply and nominal value of total amount of stuff in an economy, causing some oscillation between different modes of confusion.
like i explained in this post to you a while back:
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say the supply of investable resources is 10, there are 10 dollars in the economy which are controlled by the investment class, each capital good has a fixed productivity of 1 unit of output per capital good, and each resource currently fetches a price of one capital good per dollar. The total amount that can be produced is 10 units of output. If someone inflates their money supply, lets say the investment class is giving 10 more dollars for a total of 20, without a change in the supply of capital goods, and they still see the price of capital goods as one dollar, they may embark on more than 10 project to start. If they buy 8 capital goods for one dollar, and use half a capital good to start 16 projects, then they are left with 12 dollars, and 2 capital goods remain. they require 8 more goods to finish the 16 projects they started, and they scramble to acquire more goods but since the supply is scarce, they are forced to bid them up with the rest of their funds until each remaining good goes for 6 bucks. Now, however they realize to complete 16 projects they need 6 more goods, each good goes for 6 dollars now so they require 36 more dollars to keep going since their funds are exhausted. they will need to try go out and get financing before they are convinced they can continue. they've reached the end very quickly here but you can imagine in less scarce cases that the unsustainable problem can go on for very long if they keep getting the financing they need to believe they can continue completing their inital projects even though the physical resources will never support it as their drawn down and the new money is discounted revealing the errors.
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For instance,
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But in the aggregate on average, do they tend to under-adjust? If they don't, then spenders of the new money don't get any benefit from purchasing in under-adjusted markets. If they do, then you can make money by speculating on aggregate prices. In short, the opportunity to profit from access to "new money" is always available via capital markets to everyone.
and again, i agree speculation can happen. but refer above because no need to over repeat myself.
10-21-2010
, 10:13 AM
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 527
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Also, I find it interesting how in this thread it's really all about trying to create equality amongst the level of wealth that men have. Why don't we also try and create equality in looks, athleticism, intelligence etc?
I guess Harrison Bergeron did have it right,http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harrison_Bergeron, we should get the stronger men to carry aroudn weights all day, the intelligent to have bells in their ears, taller men to have to walk on their knees, and the good looking to wear masks. Then all will be well
I guess Harrison Bergeron did have it right,http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harrison_Bergeron, we should get the stronger men to carry aroudn weights all day, the intelligent to have bells in their ears, taller men to have to walk on their knees, and the good looking to wear masks. Then all will be well
WE ARE TRYING TO MAKE OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL PEOPLE TO BECOME WEALTHY/PRODUCTIVE/INVENTIVE.
HOW HARD IS THIS TO UNDERSTAND?
NOWONE IS TALKING ABOUT REDISTRIBUTION FOR REDISTRIBUTION'S SAKE.
WHY ARE WE INVENTING THIS COMMUNIST BOOGEYMAN?
10-21-2010
, 11:08 AM
10-27-2010
, 09:19 PM
Funnily enough, I listened to NPR the day after this thread really took off and there was a guy discussing this exact topic. He had written some book and interviewed a ton of wealthy people. He said that almost invariably, they would claim that they weren't rich. Income of 250K, 500K, 2 mil a year? Didn't matter. Net worth of 2 million, 10 million, 100 million? They still claimed they weren't rich. He even had one dude worth over a billion assert that he wasn't "rich.' The billion dollar guy talked about people he knew who were worth multiple billions and said now THOSE guys are rich.
10-28-2010
, 09:17 AM
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 527
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Yeah, but that's because those are all rich, investing kinda dudes. They just don't understand.
Funnily enough, I listened to NPR the day after this thread really took off and there was a guy discussing this exact topic. He had written some book and interviewed a ton of wealthy people. He said that almost invariably, they would claim that they weren't rich. Income of 250K, 500K, 2 mil a year? Didn't matter. Net worth of 2 million, 10 million, 100 million? They still claimed they weren't rich. He even had one dude worth over a billion assert that he wasn't "rich.' The billion dollar guy talked about people he knew who were worth multiple billions and said now THOSE guys are rich.
Funnily enough, I listened to NPR the day after this thread really took off and there was a guy discussing this exact topic. He had written some book and interviewed a ton of wealthy people. He said that almost invariably, they would claim that they weren't rich. Income of 250K, 500K, 2 mil a year? Didn't matter. Net worth of 2 million, 10 million, 100 million? They still claimed they weren't rich. He even had one dude worth over a billion assert that he wasn't "rich.' The billion dollar guy talked about people he knew who were worth multiple billions and said now THOSE guys are rich.
I mean....definitely.
DUCY?
01-28-2011
, 10:47 AM
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 2,232
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/rich
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–adjective
1.
having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.
1.
having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.
01-28-2011
, 05:22 PM
A family making 20K a year is below our poverty line and has a higher standard of living and more wealth than the vast majority of people on the planet and 99.99% of people who have ever lived, let's tax these rich mofos!
Who the hell cares where you define what "rich" anyway, be it 25K, 250K, or 2.5 million.
People don't deserve to have their earning stolen from them no matter what.
Who the hell cares where you define what "rich" anyway, be it 25K, 250K, or 2.5 million.
People don't deserve to have their earning stolen from them no matter what.
01-28-2011
, 05:48 PM
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 197
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A family making 20K a year is below our poverty line and has a higher standard of living and more wealth than the vast majority of people on the planet and 99.99% of people who have ever lived, let's tax these rich mofos!
Who the hell cares where you define what "rich" anyway, be it 25K, 250K, or 2.5 million.
People don't deserve to have their earning stolen from them no matter what.
Who the hell cares where you define what "rich" anyway, be it 25K, 250K, or 2.5 million.
People don't deserve to have their earning stolen from them no matter what.
Fly just wants people who earn their money to fork it over to the ****tards in society. Like I am supposed to give a **** about some moron who decided to drop out of high school and can't find meaningful permanent employment, over caring for my family.
I would rather by my 2 year old a million toys before having a single tax dollar subsidized to pay for some idiot who made STUPID choices.
01-28-2011
, 11:03 PM
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 215
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Mainly because there's probably more bustos in the politics forum so as a result their viewpoint with regards to quantifying something subjective such as "rich" will be different. Sure, if you define rich as not having to worry about paying your bills or being able to eat then yeah it's rich. But if that's the case, I don't think the word rich means what you think it means. But since I understand rich is relative it's pretty easy to understand why some people actually confuse 250k with actually being rich.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/rich
A family getting taxed for nearly half it's income and then having just 1 kid will not have "wealth" or "great possessions" after mortgage, insurance bills, saving for college education, retirement savings, etc etc. They will be able to eat out sometimes during the year, have a few vacations, make a few smallish luxury purchase and that's about it. If they live in a more expensive location like NYC/LA then they would have even less disposable income. Go read the BFI thread if you're still misunderstanding this.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/rich
A family getting taxed for nearly half it's income and then having just 1 kid will not have "wealth" or "great possessions" after mortgage, insurance bills, saving for college education, retirement savings, etc etc. They will be able to eat out sometimes during the year, have a few vacations, make a few smallish luxury purchase and that's about it. If they live in a more expensive location like NYC/LA then they would have even less disposable income. Go read the BFI thread if you're still misunderstanding this.
01-28-2011
, 11:04 PM
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 215
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I love when you speak.
Fly just wants people who earn their money to fork it over to the ****tards in society. Like I am supposed to give a **** about some moron who decided to drop out of high school and can't find meaningful permanent employment, over caring for my family.
I would rather by my 2 year old a million toys before having a single tax dollar subsidized to pay for some idiot who made STUPID choices and who now has a two year old with nothing to eat.
Fly just wants people who earn their money to fork it over to the ****tards in society. Like I am supposed to give a **** about some moron who decided to drop out of high school and can't find meaningful permanent employment, over caring for my family.
I would rather by my 2 year old a million toys before having a single tax dollar subsidized to pay for some idiot who made STUPID choices and who now has a two year old with nothing to eat.
01-29-2011
, 12:58 AM
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 197
01-29-2011
, 01:18 AM
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 197
You did not fix my post.
I will use my money to feed, clothe, and spoil my 2 year old. If some idiot I don't know decided to have kids with no money in the bank, that is their problem. I do not care about their kid. If someone in my neighborhood who I know is having trouble feeding his kid, then yes I will help and be charitable and bring them over groceries.
Now, if I was 110% assured that some of my tax dollars would go DIRECTLY to feeding someone's 2 year old who is going hungry, well then ok yes, I am fine with that. But let's be honest, this money is going to go to rent, drugs, gambling etc... more often then not.
It is kind of like all the people who donate money to Haiti, like seriously, what idiots, like that money is going to actually get to the people who need it and not effing laundered somehow. Now if I could magically appear in Haiti with food to directly feed those people I would without a doubt buy like a grand worth of groceries and hand them out and would absolutely love doing it.
I will use my money to feed, clothe, and spoil my 2 year old. If some idiot I don't know decided to have kids with no money in the bank, that is their problem. I do not care about their kid. If someone in my neighborhood who I know is having trouble feeding his kid, then yes I will help and be charitable and bring them over groceries.
Now, if I was 110% assured that some of my tax dollars would go DIRECTLY to feeding someone's 2 year old who is going hungry, well then ok yes, I am fine with that. But let's be honest, this money is going to go to rent, drugs, gambling etc... more often then not.
It is kind of like all the people who donate money to Haiti, like seriously, what idiots, like that money is going to actually get to the people who need it and not effing laundered somehow. Now if I could magically appear in Haiti with food to directly feed those people I would without a doubt buy like a grand worth of groceries and hand them out and would absolutely love doing it.
01-29-2011
, 09:22 AM
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 2,232
owning a house, having insurance, getting a college degree and buying say a big screen TV is rich to you? So what's this lifestyle look like? Work 50 hours a week, come home and watch TV, have dinner, rinse repeat for the most part? The occasional trip out to dinner or occasional vacation?
Problem with this thread is that people who are poor are just defining everything that's more than what they make as rich. Interesting though how rich has now come to simply mean "being able to live the same lifestyle and buy the same things as the people who buy them with credit, except just doing it without being in debt". But no, owning a house and saving for a retirement isn't having great wealth or an abundance of assets. wtf? That lifestyle used to be commonly viewed as simply middle class.
Problem with this thread is that people who are poor are just defining everything that's more than what they make as rich. Interesting though how rich has now come to simply mean "being able to live the same lifestyle and buy the same things as the people who buy them with credit, except just doing it without being in debt". But no, owning a house and saving for a retirement isn't having great wealth or an abundance of assets. wtf? That lifestyle used to be commonly viewed as simply middle class.
Last edited by boobies4me; 01-29-2011 at 09:28 AM.
01-29-2011
, 11:13 AM
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,125
01-29-2011
, 11:24 AM
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 215
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owning a house, having insurance, getting a college degree and buying say a big screen TV is rich to you? So what's this lifestyle look like? Work 50 hours a week, come home and watch TV, have dinner, rinse repeat for the most part? The occasional trip out to dinner or occasional vacation?
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Problem with this thread is that people who are poor are just defining everything that's more than what they make as rich. Interesting though how rich has now come to simply mean "being able to live the same lifestyle and buy the same things as the people who buy them with credit, except just doing it without being in debt". But no, owning a house and saving for a retirement isn't having great wealth or an abundance of assets. wtf? That lifestyle used to be commonly viewed as simply middle class.
01-29-2011
, 01:15 PM
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 197
Let me know if it is at all possible to get on a plane for haiti with 10 bags of food, get off the plane , through customs and be able to walk a couple miles to some tent city to hand the food to these people. I think it would be an easier task to try and jump up in the air and touch the moon.
Last edited by glenguy123; 01-29-2011 at 01:24 PM.
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