Sunday, April 19, 2020

A letter in Washington Post: The capacity to borrow at reasonable interest rates is a strategic sovereign asset

In his April 12 op-ed, "How economists led us astray" Robert J. Samuelson wrote, "What we conveniently overlooked was the need to preserve our borrowing power for an unknown crisis that requires a huge infusion of federal cash."

Yes, the capacity to borrow at a reasonable interest rate (or the seigniorage when printing money) is a very valuable strategic sovereign asset, and it should not be squandered away by benefiting the members of the current generations or with some nonproductive investments. 

So, when public borrowings are authorized, that should require Congress being upfront that a part of that borrowing capacity is being consumed, which has a cost, and give an indication of who (children or grandchildren born what year) are expected to have to pay back that debt.

Mr. Samuelson also referred to "low dollar interest rates [that] will keep down the costs of servicing the debt." Sadly, those current "low dollar interest rates" are artificial rates, much subsidized in that since 1988, with Basel I regulations, banks are not required to hold any capital against Treasuries, and of course subsidized by the Federal Reserve purchasing huge quantities of Treasuries.

PS. A reverse mortgage on our children’s and grandchildren’s future



Friday, April 3, 2020

What if golf, roulette, horse-racing or tennis, had fallen into the hands of a Basel Committee?

What would have happened to golf, if its handicap system had fallen into hands as those of the Basel Committee who designed the risk weighted bank capital requirements?

What would have happened to casinos, if odds settings, like for roulette, had fallen into hands as those of the Basel Committee who designed the risk weighted bank capital requirements?

What would have happened to horse racing, if the handicapping of horses with weights had fallen into hands as those of the Basel Committee who designed the risk weighted bank capital requirements?

What would have happened to tennis, if the ranking of the players had fallen into hands of those of the Basel Committee who designed the risk weighted bank capital requirements?