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How much can we borrow?

24

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,472 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    There is no such thing as too much debt as long as we can service it.

    There is nothing wrong with my bottle of whiskey a day, so long as the old liver can hold up. Well, so far so good :cool:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,909 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    There is nothing wrong with my bottle of whiskey a day, so long as the old liver can hold up.

    ive no idea what your drinking habits have to do about debt, but the poster is absolutely spot on, growing public debt is absolutely fine, provided your economy can indeed continue to service these debts. its common practice globally to continually roll public debts over for extended periods, provided these debts are regularly serviced, without it causing any major negative effects


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,472 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    ive no idea what your drinking habits have to do about debt, but the poster is absolutely spot on, growing public debt is absolutely fine, provided your economy can indeed continue to service these debts. its common practice globally to continually roll public debts over for extended periods, provided these debts are regularly serviced, without it causing any major negative effects

    You know what gets me about all these discussions about debt is that it's a conversation without the creditors ever really playing a part in it. It is like a conversation in the front seats of a car, with the creditors sitting in the back, arms folded while it's decided what to do about the problem child.

    According to a post several posts up, the creditors are largely the Irish citizens, and then various European citizens via the ECB.

    In particular the creditors are future pensioners, who keep seeing the state default, yes default, on their pensions by pushing the pension age out. Continually pushing the pension age out because you cannot honour your commitments because you've taken on too much debt and too many commitments is a fairly major negative effect to us pensioners.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,223 ✭✭✭✭ELM327


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    Countries rarely go bust, as central banks can never run out of money, private debt is the far more dangerous of the two, as we learned the hard way in 08


    Central banks can run out of money especially in the Eurozone.


    '08-'09 was subprime private debt - which is always problematic if left unchecked. Thankfully the subprime mortgage regime is better regulated now.


    Plenty of countries have gone bust including some multiple times. The more common practice is to borrow at low interest rates and roll it over ad nauseum until inflation does its job. I believe some WW1 debts were only recently repaid.


    Now is a good time to borrow, as long as we can afford to service the debt, as interest rates are at historic lows. The only catch to this is that the bond markets must believe in your nation's solvency.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,909 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    You know what gets me about all these discussions about debt is that it's a conversation without the creditors ever really playing a part in it.

    According to a post several posts up, the creditors are largely the Irish citizens, and then various European citizens via the ECB.

    In particular the creditors are future pensioners, who keep seeing the state default, yes default, on their pensions by pushing the pension age out. Continually pushing the pension age out because you cannot honour your commitments because you've taken on too much debt and too many commitments is a fairly major negative effect to us pensioners.

    the main creditors of our economies are in fact private sector financial institutions which we normally call banks, banks create the majority of our money supply in the form of credit, hence the term, 'credit crisis' in relation to the previous crash. you are indeed correct though, the main creditors, the banks, are rarely talked about, in relation to money, and its creation, which is rather disturbing when you think about it.

    oh and central banks only create the minor part of the money supply

    ...again, banks create the majority of our credit(money) when a loan is taken out, again, this has nothing to do with public debt


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,909 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    ELM327 wrote: »
    Central banks can run out of money especially in the Eurozone.


    '08-'09 was subprime private debt - which is always problematic if left unchecked. Thankfully the subprime mortgage regime is better regulated now.


    Plenty of countries have gone bust including some multiple times. The more common practice is to borrow at low interest rates and roll it over ad nauseum until inflation does its job. I believe some WW1 debts were only recently repaid.


    Now is a good time to borrow, as long as we can afford to service the debt, as interest rates are at historic lows. The only catch to this is that the bond markets must believe in your nation's solvency.

    you may need to discuss this further with mr draghi and mr greenspan then! once again, and according to these folks, central banks can never run out of money, please take it up with these folks if you have an issue with this!

    ha! you d be naïve to think we ve solved the issues within out financial sector, my own region is just entering another credit fueled building boom, what could possibly go wrong!

    again, history shows, private debt has in fact caused far more frequent and far more serious economic crashes, so, plough on lads with the public borrowing, be grand!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,472 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    Ok that is interesting. So the main buyers of Government bonds are private (or supposedly private) banks. And they buy this government debt at near zero coupon for what purpose? I mean what is in it for the Banks to keep buying more and more Government debt that doesn't yield much, or anything at all? Also, are these banks in this trade for the long haul. I'm trying to understand why private banks get involved in this, how it generates return to their business. It seems that growing your balance sheet with billions of government debt, with little or no return, is a policy with a finite timeframe from the banks point of view. (A bit like my bottle of whiskey a day analogy earlier)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,909 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    Ok that is interesting. So the main buyers of Government bonds are private (or supposedly private) banks. And they buy this government debt at near zero coupon for what purpose? I mean what is in it for the Banks to keep buying more and more Government debt that doesn't yield much, or anything at all? Also, are these banks in this trade for the long haul. I'm trying to understand why private banks get involved in this, how it generates return to their business. It seems that growing your balance sheet with billions of government debt with little or no return has a finite timeframe from the banks point of view.

    ive a vague understanding of the bond markets, and im up to my eyeballs at the moment, so cant go any further, but we re not talking about how the majority of the money supply actually comes from private sector banks in the form of credit, i suspect most politicians dont understand this, or their advisors for that matter, i certainly dont see much evidence of that, but i could be wrong


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,753 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    ive no idea what your drinking habits have to do about debt, but the poster is absolutely spot on, growing public debt is absolutely fine, provided your economy can indeed continue to service these debts. its common practice globally to continually roll public debts over for extended periods, provided these debts are regularly serviced, without it causing any major negative effects

    This is true, but the problem is you never know when the situation will change.

    Greece ran large fiscal deficits, and all looked ok, until it was too late.


    Yes, it is true that continued deficits are possible **if**:

    (1) annual deficits are small
    (2) interest rates stay low
    (3) economic growth exceeds the interest rate

    There is a formula.



    Also, not that we already have a large stock of public debt, so bear that in mind when anybody calls for even more borrowing.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,753 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    Ok that is interesting. So the main buyers of Government bonds are private (or supposedly private) banks. And they buy this government debt at near zero coupon for what purpose? I mean what is in it for the Banks to keep buying more and more Government debt that doesn't yield much, or anything at all? Also, are these banks in this trade for the long haul. I'm trying to understand why private banks get involved in this, how it generates return to their business. It seems that growing your balance sheet with billions of government debt, with little or no return, is a policy with a finite timeframe from the banks point of view. (A bit like my bottle of whiskey a day analogy earlier)

    First, are you sure banks are the main buyers?

    Read this:

    https://www.ntma.ie/uploads/general/Investor-Presentation-November.pdf

    see slide 30.


  • Registered Users Posts: 725 ✭✭✭moon2


    Wanderer78 wrote: »
    the poster is absolutely spot on, growing public debt is absolutely fine, provided your economy can indeed continue to service these debts.

    I feel like the second half of your sentence is being casually ignored throughout this entire thread.

    The truism being repeated is "everything is fine as long as it's fine". Yes, taking a loan is fine as long as you can pay it back.

    At what point will the debt we take on *no longer* be serviceable? At what interest rate would the current irish national debt become unsustainable? When will it begin to negatively impact our economy, our pensions, our ability to improve national infrastructure, or our day to day lives.

    Edit: I assume the calculation being performed by our government is that $1 borrowed today will result in the county being $1.2 better off - i.e. borrowing will result in economic growth large enough to compensate for the loan and interest. What rate of growth do we need to sustain for that to hold true?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,472 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    Geuze wrote: »
    First, are you sure banks are the main buyers?

    Read this:

    https://www.ntma.ie/uploads/general/Investor-Presentation-November.pdf

    see slide 30.

    Thanks, I don't know what IGB stands for but I'd suspect Eurozone pensions and Insurance companies are big holders of these debts. Although, again Insurers (and indeed pension funds) can only hold so much of zero (or near zero) coupon debt, they have a return to make like everybody else.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 40,308 Mod ✭✭✭✭Seth Brundle


    You know what gets me about all these discussions about debt is that it's a conversation without the creditors ever really playing a part in it. It is like a conversation in the front seats of a car, with the creditors sitting in the back, arms folded while it's decided what to do about the problem child.

    According to a post several posts up, the creditors are largely the Irish citizens, and then various European citizens via the ECB.

    In particular the creditors are future pensioners, who keep seeing the state default, yes default, on their pensions by pushing the pension age out. Continually pushing the pension age out because you cannot honour your commitments because you've taken on too much debt and too many commitments is a fairly major negative effect to us pensioners.
    You make it sound like you want the citizens to have a voice in all of this.
    The citizens are ignorant in terms of national financial management and shouldn't be let anywhere near this. It would become politicised just like water charges.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,472 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    You make it sound like you want the citizens to have a voice in all of this.
    The citizens are ignorant in terms of national financial management and shouldn't be let anywhere near this. It would become politicised just like water charges.

    Defaulting on pension ages and commitments is politicised whether you like it or not. And once it ever emerges the cupboard is bare, the water charges demos will be a picnic in comparison.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,352 ✭✭✭Padre_Pio


    You make it sound like you want the citizens to have a voice in all of this.
    The citizens are ignorant in terms of national financial management and shouldn't be let anywhere near this. It would become politicised just like water charges.

    People in general don't look further than their own wallets and can't make impartial decisions.

    I would vote for any motion that doesn't financially hurt me, but so would everyone else.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,486 ✭✭✭Brussels Sprout


    In particular the creditors are future pensioners, who keep seeing the state default, yes default, on their pensions by pushing the pension age out. Continually pushing the pension age out because you cannot honour your commitments because you've taken on too much debt and too many commitments is a fairly major negative effect to us pensioners.

    The reason the pension age gets pushed out is twofold:
    1. People are living much longer
    2. There are proportionately fewer younger people to support the pensioners now due to a falling birth-rate

    That demographic shift is happening all over the western world and as a result pension ages are being pushed out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,472 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    The reason the pension age gets pushed out is twofold:
    1. People are living much longer
    2. There are proportionately fewer younger people to support the pensioners now due to a falling birth-rate

    That demographic shift is happening all over the western world and as a result pension ages are being pushed out.

    But we have increases in population almost every year, due to migration in.

    I know the next line will be that some of the population increase is due to people getting older, but there is a limit to that, yes people are living longer on average but that is not the main driver of the population increase.

    Also, zero coupon bonds are not going to help here, and there is a limit to how much pensioners can fund zero coupon debt issued by government.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,753 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    Thanks, I don't know what IGB stands for but I'd suspect Eurozone pensions and Insurance companies are big holders of these debts.

    IGB is new to me too.

    IGB = Irish Govt Bond


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 27,290 Mod ✭✭✭✭Podge_irl


    But we have increases in population almost every year, due to migration in.

    I know the next line will be that some of the population increase is due to people getting older, but there is a limit to that, yes people are living longer on average but that is not the main driver of the population increase.

    Also, zero coupon bonds are not going to help here, and there is a limit to how much pensioners can fund zero coupon debt issued by government.

    You have the causality completely backwards. Borrowing is not causing us to limit pensions, massive increases in pension payments are necessitating borrowing (among other things obviously).

    The demographic maps is changing rapidly and the ratio of workers to pensioners is constantly decreasing. The pension age will need to increase (and should have already) because of demographics and nothing more.

    In essence, you are borrowing to pay for pensioners now under the assumption that increased GDP and inflation will pay for it in the future.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40,061 ✭✭✭✭Harry Palmr


    The Kaiser Bismarck chose 70 for the introduction of the state pension as it was about when most people dropped dead in the 1880s, it was lowered to 65 in 1917.

    That the retirement age has hardly shifted in generations as EVERYTHING else has changed is one of the great missteps of the last century.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,472 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    The Kaiser Bismarck chose 70 for the introduction of the state pension as it was about when most people dropped dead in the 1880s, it was lowered to 65 in 1917.

    That the retirement age has hardly shifted in generations as EVERYTHING else has changed is one of the great missteps of the last century.

    Appreciate that, but there were a lot of things that went on in the 1880s that we hoped we'd have moved on from. Work until you drop is not going to be acceptable to the masses and rightfully so.

    Also, if pensions cannot be funded, then how the hell are they going to introduce and pay for Universal Basic Income. Automation and AI are going to leave a lot of people without jobs in the next decade, some of whom will be effectively done at 40 or 50, never mind 60 or 70.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,472 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    Podge_irl wrote: »
    You have the causality completely backwards. Borrowing is not causing us to limit pensions, massive increases in pension payments are necessitating borrowing (among other things obviously).

    The demographic maps is changing rapidly and the ratio of workers to pensioners is constantly decreasing. The pension age will need to increase (and should have already) because of demographics and nothing more.

    In essence, you are borrowing to pay for pensioners now under the assumption that increased GDP and inflation will pay for it in the future.

    We are just trying to follow the money trail here. I'm assuming that Irish and Eurozone pensions and insurers are big buyers of this Sovereign debt that is being issued. If they aren't it would be useful to know who is making up a large share of the market for Irish Government debt.

    Pensions need yield, and it needs to be real yield to keep pace of inflation. If pensions were queuing up to buy Sovereign debt at zero coupon and the issuer has the 'assumption' (or hope) of inflation to 'pay for it' then the Government are selling the pension funds a pup, and the creditors will be most displeased when they have negative real returns, thereby making the funding gaps even worse.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 27,290 Mod ✭✭✭✭Podge_irl


    Pension funds will be invested in a number of things, but sovereign bonds will most certainly be one of them due to the low risk.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    https://amp.scmp.com/economy/china-economy/article/3112343/us-debt-china-how-big-it-and-why-it-important

    What would happen in US/ China trade war?

    China sells 5% of all US bonds, who buys them? I'm guessing interest rates go up and then in Europe too. What if they went to 5%? Could we afford to pay 5% on short term debt as it matures? Could we pay 5% on 223 billion? We can't print our own money. What happens if some multinationals also leave?

    Ireland


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    moon2 wrote: »
    I feel like the second half of your sentence is being casually ignored throughout this entire thread.

    The truism being repeated is "everything is fine as long as it's fine". Yes, taking a loan is fine as long as you can pay it back.

    At what point will the debt we take on *no longer* be serviceable? At what interest rate would the current irish national debt become unsustainable? When will it begin to negatively impact our economy, our pensions, our ability to improve national infrastructure, or our day to day lives.

    Every single IGB yield is negative at the moment other than 30y maturity which is 0.267%, so with respect, the question in itself is effectively irrelevant. The whole point is to sell bonds now and "refinance" at the appropriate times.
    Edit: I assume the calculation being performed by our government is that $1 borrowed today will result in the county being $1.2 better off - i.e. borrowing will result in economic growth large enough to compensate for the loan and interest. What rate of growth do we need to sustain for that to hold true?
    That's the model that I, for the most part, subscribe to but I don't agree at all that our finance ministers for the past decade+ have believed that. I'd borrow and spend massive amounts on infrastructure projects and particularly green energy that we might be able to sell to other countries in the future. There's no good reason we can't be the Norway of renewables.


  • Registered Users Posts: 103 ✭✭ice.cube


    Why? IMF already has multi-currency reserve. The USD has historically been one of the most stable currencies and nothing has changed there. US debt is largely short-term, so we'd need to see a massive depression in the US which didn't materially impact other countries to see a realistic reason to move away from the USD as the main currency reserve; but as I said, there are already other reserve currencies.

    If we're talking hypothetical in the longer term, maybe crypto could potentially be a new reserve... that's about as realistic as a massive move away from USD in the foreseeable future.

    Agreed it isn’t going anywhere anytime soon but do you think it will remain in place long term? The big question mark is on a suitable alternative as I stated earlier.

    The Fed attempted to take their foot off the printing press pedal in 2019 however were unable to successfully do so. This year has obviously been unprecedented but for every $1 the government spends .50c is basically money created out of nothing. I would have doubts on how they can bring these massive deficits into line in the short to medium term.

    Throw in the trade deficits and they are basically creating dollars, selling the debt across the world and then using that money to buy goods from other countries. This is a very interesting point IMO.

    Obviously the dollar isn’t the only reserve currency, but you have to wonder what the future will hold for it. Crypto is obviously an interesting one and of course you have some people suggesting going back to gold or even a combination of the two. I realise both are highly unlikely but still very interesting!

    I am just very curious on how it will all play out!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    ice.cube wrote: »
    Agreed it isn’t going anywhere anytime soon but do you think it will remain in place long term? The big question mark is on a suitable alternative as I stated earlier.

    The Fed attempted to take their foot off the printing press pedal in 2019 however were unable to successfully do so. This year has obviously been unprecedented but for every $1 the government spends .50c is basically money created out of nothing. I would have doubts on how they can bring these massive deficits into line in the short to medium term.

    Throw in the trade deficits and they are basically creating dollars, selling the debt across the world and then using that money to buy goods from other countries. This is a very interesting point IMO.

    Obviously the dollar isn’t the only reserve currency, but you have to wonder what the future will hold for it. Crypto is obviously an interesting one and of course you have some people suggesting going back to gold or even a combination of the two. I realise both are highly unlikely but still very interesting!

    I am just very curious on how it will all play out!

    I'd like to stop it playing out in Ireland.

    The numbers in the us look awful, https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2020/11/charting-america-united-states-debt/#:~:text=The American debt has ballooned,spent on healthcare and education.

    I guess so what, nothing much I can do about it...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    Cormac lucey in the times today talking about higher interest rates on the horizon. If that happens, we're goosed.

    As Bowie said, we've got 5 years.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,753 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    It will help if we have locked in much of our debt at long-term low rates.

    Then, if market rates rise, we aren't affected as much, although of course maturing debt has to be redeemed and replaced.

    If we are still borrowing, running deficits, then that is worse.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    Really interesting article discussing Andrew Mellon, Keynes and Friedman. Mellon opened the financial dam in 1920s and caused the great depression. There was an opportunity then to start again with a more equitable economic solution but then the baloney of Keynes digging holes and refilling them and inequality of Friedman followed. Since then to the dam has risen, holding back more and more financial devastation and now the us has a relative debt equivalent to world war 2 and growing.

    Lucey points out this cannot continue forever and expects a collapse in five years.

    If that dam breaks Ireland is one of the most exposed nations..... hopefully there won't be another famine.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    I think we've already borrowed too much and are living on borrowed time and the potential future generosity of decision makers in the EU like Viktor Orban.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    Highest debt per capita in Europe advertised in Irish Times

    https://www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/ireland-to-have-highest-debt-per-head-in-europe-this-year-1.4503652

    I think we're still third in the world?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    mcsean2163 wrote: »
    I think we've already borrowed too much and are living on borrowed time and the potential future generosity of decision makers in the EU like Viktor Orban.
    Current Hungarian Government 10Y bond is 2.835% so best of luck with that to them and Mr Orban going forward.

    I think we'll be just fine at 0.018% 10Y.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,486 ✭✭✭Brussels Sprout


    Current Hungarian Government 10Y bond is 2.835% so best of luck with that to them and Mr Orban going forward.

    I think we'll be just fine at 0.018% 10Y.

    I was wondering how that was so high given the ECB's been buying government bonds but then I realised that they never joined the Euro and are still on the Forint.

    That gives Orban precisely zero say in any Eurozone policy. As an aside, his Fidesz party was effectively booted out of the EPP group last week.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,338 ✭✭✭Bit cynical


    L1011 wrote: »
    There is no figure if the ECB continues its support programmes.
    It is like the game of musical chairs with the ECB controlling the music. Who will be nearest the chairs and be able to grab a seat? Who will be left standing after the music stops?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    It is like the game of musical chairs with the ECB controlling the music. Who will be nearest the chairs and be able to grab a seat? Who will be left standing after the music stops?

    Agree, we've spent the most on covid19 and have had the second strictest lockdown in the EU. Finland seems to have taken a much more balanced response to covid19 (150th strictest restrictions globally) and had a sixth of our deaths. They've had to pay for our banks, our public sector and now our extreme covid19 stance. We've rewarded them for their investment by offering multinationals a way of avoiding paying taxes in the EU.

    Do people think we'll be allowed to be the most profligate nation in the EU forever? I think the s&&t will hit the fan by 2023 unless a miracle happens.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,106 ✭✭✭✭listermint


    mcsean2163 wrote: »
    Agree, we've spent the most on covid19 and have had the second strictest lockdown in the EU. Finland seems to have taken a much more balanced response to covid19 (150th strictest restrictions globally) and had a sixth of our deaths. They've had to pay for our banks, our public sector and now our extreme covid19 stance. We've rewarded them for their investment by offering multinationals a way of avoiding paying taxes in the EU.

    Do people think we'll be allowed to be the most profligate nation in the EU forever? I think the s&&t will hit the fan by 2023 unless a miracle happens.

    Finland are paying for our banks.

    That's a new one. Go on.. I'm intrigued.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 49 Deseras


    Europe is printing money due to Covid soon there will be hyper inflation


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40,061 ✭✭✭✭Harry Palmr


    Please explain and cite sources.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 103 ✭✭ice.cube


    Deseras wrote: »
    Europe is printing money due to Covid soon there will be hyper inflation

    50% inflation per month is the widely accepted definition of hyper inflation.........you might explain your point a little better :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,753 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    Deseras wrote: »
    Europe is printing money due to Covid soon there will be hyper inflation

    QE started in October 2014.

    https://www.ecb.europa.eu/mopo/implement/app/html/index.en.html

    That is 6.5 years ago.

    2.9 trillion of extra money has been created, already.

    This excludes the more recent PEPP.

    Has all the extra money caused consumer price inflation?

    Not yet.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    listermint wrote: »
    Finland are paying for our banks.

    That's a new one. Go on.. I'm intrigued.

    Are you kidding? The EU bailed out our banks. We're part of a common currency union. We keep borrowing and never paying it back. The fiscally responsible states are supporting us. We're probably the biggest beggars in Europe since 2008, likely worse than the Greeks.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,980 ✭✭✭Pauliedragon


    Governments should spend their way through a recession to keep people in jobs and paying tax. Then when things get better take a few extra quid off people in tax to pay for the next downturn but they wont do that because increasing taxes costs votes and winning the next election is more important.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    mcsean2163 wrote: »
    Are you kidding? The EU bailed out our banks. We're part of a common currency union. We keep borrowing and never paying it back. The fiscally responsible states are supporting us. We're probably the biggest beggars in Europe since 2008, likely worse than the Greeks.

    That’s not correct. We “bailed out” our banks largely using money we borrowed on the international bond markets.

    The money that was subsequently loaned by the Troika after the above was already a fait accompli was used to cover normal budgetary expenditures (ie paying for public services such as schools, hospitals, social welfare etc with, at its peak, us paying for roughly 1 in every 4 Euro we were spending on such public services using money borrowed from the Troika).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    View wrote: »
    That’s not correct. We “bailed out” our banks largely using money we borrowed on the international bond markets.

    The money that was subsequently loaned by the Troika after the above was already a fait accompli was used to cover normal budgetary expenditures (ie paying for public services such as schools, hospitals, social welfare etc with, at its peak, us paying for roughly 1 in every 4 Euro we were spending on such public services using money borrowed from the Troika).

    Yes. I used banks as a catch all. It was initially the banks that sprung the leake but the public sector borrowing sunk us.

    Without dwelling on it, this is not a what happened in Ireland during GFC thread, the fiscally responsible countries such as Finland have been bailing us out for a long time. Every year we take their food and don't pay it back.

    If every country in EU responded as we did for covid19 the EU would be even more worse off. So surely countries like Finland must look at our relatively low numbers, pup etc and say wtf are they doing? Why are we paying for it?

    Just responding to listermint...


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,486 ✭✭✭Brussels Sprout


    mcsean2163 wrote: »
    Without dwelling on it, this is not a what happened in Ireland during GFC thread, the fiscally responsible countries such as Finland have been bailing us out for a long time. Every year we take their food and don't pay it back.

    If every country in EU responded as we did for covid19 the EU would be even more worse off. So surely countries like Finland must look at our relatively low numbers, pup etc and say wtf are they doing? Why are we paying for it?
    .


    Just so you're aware Finland haven't balanced their own budget since 2008. Personally I don't have a problem with that, but since the basis for your entire argument seems to be that governments should only spend what they take in, you should probably look for a different nation to put up on that pedestal.


  • Posts: 3,801 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    mcsean2163 wrote: »
    Are you kidding? The EU bailed out our banks. We're part of a common currency union. We keep borrowing and never paying it back. The fiscally responsible states are supporting us. We're probably the biggest beggars in Europe since 2008, likely worse than the Greeks.

    You don’t understand the basics of macro economics.

    We weren’t bailed out. We got a loan at extremely high interest rates.

    And in fact by saving the banks we probably subsidised other countries in the EU.

    For every borrower there’s a lender. By bailing out the Irish banks the Irish government stopped the contagion from spreading to the lender banks (hence the burn the bond holders marches).

    Ireland’s recent deficit, like other deficits in EU countries, is due to covid. Once again we are obligated to pay it back. Most countries are in deficit — look at the US — and borrowing and paying back is not begging.


  • Posts: 3,801 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    mcsean2163 wrote: »
    the fiscally responsible countries such as Finland have been bailing us out for a long time. Every year we take their food and don't pay it back..

    This is amongst the dumbest things I have ever read. We export food as a surplus. We don’t borrow from Finland at all. Our deficit has nothing to do with their surplus, but they don’t even have a surplus. And we pay back loans (which isn’t food to Finland).


  • Registered Users Posts: 598 ✭✭✭pioneerpro


    mcsean2163 wrote: »
    I'm just going to ignore your name calling. You're obviously some sort of untermensch and don't want to turn this into a personal attack thread.

    ##Mod Note##

    Don't just post memes please.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,486 ✭✭✭Brussels Sprout


    For anyone interested in some of the concerns and questions voiced in this thread today's episode of the David McWilliam's podcast should be of interest. He has Stephanie Kelton on as a guest to discuss topics such as :
    • The current US stimulus package
    • National Debt
    • Currency Issuers
    • Inflation
    • Interest Rates
    • The limits of Monetary Policy without Fiscal Policy

    You can listen to it here


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