• barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 days ago

    As I understand it, quantitative easing is supposed to be viewed as an emergency measure that states use for temporary relief when the markets go into the negative to avoid everything spiraling into a recession. The US is just using QE all the time as a base stimulus, which means they can’t use it in an emergency.

      • WhatDoYouMeanPodcast [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        5 days ago

        Imagine a burger:

        “Hey Bank-chan, I have this idea for a restaurant that sells balloon animals. I think I’m going to charge $12 for a burger+balloon combo. Can I have 30,000,000 of the new money to do it?”

        “Sure, Slimeball-kun. Here you go!”

        Nobody has enough money to buy stupid borger

        “Hey Bank-chan, I’m declaring bankrupcy. you’re only getting $2,000,000 back on the investment”

        “But you and 99999 other people were supposed to make me profit!”

        Local news: “Your local bank is freaking out”

        “Oh holy shit, get my money out of that bank!” x9,999,999

        “Omg I don’t have enough money if 9999999 people withdraw their savings”

        bank run

        bank collapses

        nobody can make any businesses

        feds try to step in… again

        Only this time nobody wants to buy the dogshit bonds because BRICS is trying to divest. B&RI is using USD as toilet paper

        “Idk, maybe raise taxes 88% on the lowest 25% of Americans?” - Elon Mu$$k

        lowest 25%-sama can’t afford food

        also that real estate bubble that was giga overdue happens because of the week-decade thing

        cool zone begins

        Meanwhile China enjoys a functioning, self-sufficient economy because they are capable of doing anything

        I imagine it’s something like that.

    • Preston Maness ☭@lemmygrad.ml
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      5 days ago

      As I understand it, quantitative easing is supposed to be viewed as an emergency measure that states use for temporary relief when the markets go into the negative to avoid everything spiraling into a recession. The US is just using QE all the time as a base stimulus, which means they can’t use it in an emergency.

      Well, they raised interest rates throughout 2022 until basically the end of 2023, where it topped out at 5.33. It’s dipped about a percentage point now, to 4.48 [1]. So there is some room to keep playing the QE game, in theory. Granted, QE and the FFER aren’t a causal relation here; just a correlation. Lots of folks thought that near-zero or zero interest rate policy would kill the dollar back in the 2007-2008 global financial crisis, but so far, the dollar is still around. Maybe additional QE would kill the dollar. Maybe it won’t make a difference. I honestly don’t know enough to have an educated guess.

      [1] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FEDFUNDS