Former Treasury Staffer: US Debt-to-GDP Doesnt Matter (But Greeces Does)  @deficitowls5296
Former Treasury Staffer: US Debt-to-GDP Doesnt Matter (But Greeces Does)  @deficitowls5296
Deficit Owls | Former Treasury Staffer: US Debt-to-GDP Doesn't Matter (But Greece's Does) @deficitowls5296 | Uploaded April 2017 | Updated October 2024, 3 hours ago.
Frank Newman, former Deputy Secretary of the US Treasury, discussing the US national debt, how it compares to other countries' debt, and debt-to-GDP ratios. For a country with its own currency (who doesn't promise to keep it at a fixed exchange rate), the national debt-to-GDP ratio simply does not matter. There is no chance of markets 'getting spooked' and pulling out of US Treasury bonds.

This is because there is nowhere else for dollars to go. No matter how much spending or lending or trading people do with US dollars, at the end of the day *somebody* ends up with them, and whoever this is has exactly two choices: they can hold on to the dollars (as reserves or as currency) or they can sell them to the US government for a Treasury bond. There are no other choices. The person could choose to sell the dollars to somebody else, but this just pushes the choice to the next person. *Somebody* has to choose between holding dollars and holding Treasuries.

And Treasuries is the logical choice. Treasuries and cash are exactly as risky (since they are both merely IOUs of the federal government), except that Treasuries pay interest while cash does not. And very wealthy people and institutional investors won't choose to keep their money sitting in a bank, because banks are risky and deposits are only ensured up to $250,000, while Treasuries are backed by the full faith and credit of the US government. Between these forces, there will ALWAYS be a strong demand for US Treasuries.

But even if for some reason there weren't, this still wouldn't affect the US government's ability to issue them as part of its spending procedure, because there are special banks who by law must buy any Treasuries that the broader market doesn't want at auction.
More on that here: youtu.be/u0e4afZElBE?list=PLZJAgo9FgHWZZHf8kluvJT3MwQmLQ9XX0

Watch the whole talk here: vimeo.com/41449585

Follow Deficit Owls on Facebook and Twitter:
facebook.com/DeficitOwls
twitter.com/DeficitOwls

And follow our sister page, Modern Money Memes:
facebook.com/ModernMoneyMeme
twitter.com/ModernMoneyMeme
Former Treasury Staffer: US Debt-to-GDP Doesnt Matter (But Greeces Does)MMT: Warren Mosler on why Quantitative Easing is NOT money printingInflation Is Just Not That Easy To Cause (Even With A Job Guarantee)MMT: What About Creative Destruction?Even Conservatives Should Support A Job GuaranteeWont A Credit Downgrade Raise The Governments Interest Rate?Why There Will ALWAYS Be Demand For US Treasury BondsCurrency Is An IOU of the GovernmentGovernment Can Buy Things The Private Sector Doesnt WantMMT: Taxes Drive MoneyThe Government Deficit = Private Sector SavingGovernment Surpluses Can Cause Economic Disaster

Former Treasury Staffer: US Debt-to-GDP Doesn't Matter (But Greece's Does) @deficitowls5296

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER