Sy Borg wrote: ↑November 26th, 2024, 6:43 amNo the "money pit" is another myth. It is fully controlled with targetted taxation.Sculptor1 wrote: ↑November 26th, 2024, 6:04 amNo, the money pit is not bottomless. When you print more money, it degrades people's savings and ultimately redistributes income upwards, because those at the top can better protect their assets from the resultant inflation.Sy Borg wrote: ↑November 26th, 2024, 2:03 amNo the money does not "run out". The source of all money is government. And there is a bottomless pit. The trick is to control how much comes back into the exchequer through taxation. If you allow too much money to sit in offshore accounts, as financial instruments; as crypto; in schemes of r rent seeking behaviour in which money is "earned" through not work it is then that the economy stagnates. People are priced out of housing, they have no ob security; there is lower incentive to build and grow for the people.Sculptor1 wrote: ↑November 25th, 2024, 4:41 pmOkay, let's call it Kirchnerism. The trouble with unsustainable welfare programs is that the money runs out. There is no perfect solution, but ever-growing debt can only make things worse unless that debt is an investment for greater productivity.
There are no discernable socailist polices On the contrary.
Argentina is owned by outside interests and its resources are sucked out by mostly American business.
It is doubtful is the world financial system is going to allow Argentina to begin to look after its masses, and start paying them for the work they do and the resources they provide on the world stage.
The trouble is that it is the people with all the money and power that formulate buxzz phrases like "When you spedn other peoples money it eventually runs out"; or "welfare makes people lazy". None of which is true. It is those with the money and power who earn without working; who are parasitic on society; not the unemployed whom they have created.
This section of the population who have bought the government and control the media rely on poor people to swallow their sound bites and repeat phrases, paricipating in their own oppression. The worst of these is the "middle class" who think they have a chance at the bigtime, admire people who earn through money but do not work. And they can be relied on to say stuff like "Make America Great", or " The trouble with welfare programs is that the money runs out." Both US parties do this. Put the focus on the must vulnerable; be that gay, trans, immigrants, foreigners. The Democrats can't even bring themselves to say the phrase "working class", when it is this class that actally creates all the wealth for those that they have to pay rent/mortgage to.
Note that the money has indeed run out in Argentina. In fact, Argentina has defaulted on its debts four times since 1982.
Economic management is ideally a matter of pragmatically getting the policy balance right to suit the times rather than operating on rigid ideology.
Have you not noticed how the money put is indeed bottomless when it comes to bailing out the banks? LOL
But there seems to be restrictions on it when it comes to providing basic services?
In the UK after 2009/10 the government manage to find £400billion to hand over the banks.
Larger sums in the USA. It's almost as if things are not being thought through properly.
You'll be telling me next that the deficit is all important.