national debt and zero-sum games

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national debt and zero-sum games

glen e. p. ropella-2

I keep hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will
have to be paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their children".
 This oversimplification has always _seemed_ fundamentally wrong to me
... more wrong than just being an oversimplification.

It doesn't seem to me like the economy is a zero-sum game.  Money isn't
subject to any conservation laws that I"m aware of.  Granted, there are
economic drivers that are conserved; but money isn't one of them.  So,
what literature do I need to start reading that will help me a)
understand what is and isn't conserved about debt and b) clarify this
point to those who insist on making the oversimplified argument?  I'm
not convinced one way or the other; I just want to find a bit of clarity
around this soundbite.  In particular, it strikes me that on a personal
scale (time and distance), money is mostly conserved.  E.g. I pile up
credit card debt or buy a house and that debt sticks with me.  I either
have to pay it off or default (or die).  But is that true at all scales?

I've spent some time looking at generic books and popular magazine
articles on economics.  But they lack the clarity I need (or perhaps I'm
too thick to understand them).  And the sources for Game Theory I've
seen are too idealistic to get any real traction for an argument.

Thanks.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Vladimyr Burachynsky
Glen,
I share your misgivings about the current discussions regarding money,
Before the second world war there was an Austrian or Austro-Hungarian school
of economics that had substantially different ideas than is currently in
fashion. My understanding is that Brettton Woods ? agreement ,after the war,
ended the old school and started the one we now think is "Normal"
The name that sticks out is Von Mises. I have a copy somewhere but it was
thicker than my own PhD thesis and never had the courage to crack it open.

It is a little late in my life for such a dramatic shift of intellectual
pursuit..

Reading Herodotus I am convinced children rarely pay off the debts of their
forefathers and would rather emigrate or fight. Trying to extract ancient
debts from the unwilling is a nasty affair that costs more than it returns.

Solon's approach to declare bankruptcy for Athens is said to have saved the
city and heralded in a new era of Prosperity.
If money does not last forever then it seems debt is just as short lived.

Maybe others have more details or ideas to add to the discussions. Debt
crisis have been downplayed by historians I suspect because they did not
fully understand the economics or principles.

 
 
Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky
Ph.D.(Civil Eng.), M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.), M.Sc.(Biology)
 
120-1053 Beaverhill Blvd.
Winnipeg, Manitoba
CANADA R2J 3R2
(204) 2548321  Phone/Fax
[hidden email]
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf
Of glen e. p. ropella
Sent: September 10, 2010 11:42 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: [FRIAM] national debt and zero-sum games


I keep hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will
have to be paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their children".
 This oversimplification has always _seemed_ fundamentally wrong to me
... more wrong than just being an oversimplification.

It doesn't seem to me like the economy is a zero-sum game.  Money isn't
subject to any conservation laws that I"m aware of.  Granted, there are
economic drivers that are conserved; but money isn't one of them.  So,
what literature do I need to start reading that will help me a)
understand what is and isn't conserved about debt and b) clarify this
point to those who insist on making the oversimplified argument?  I'm
not convinced one way or the other; I just want to find a bit of clarity
around this soundbite.  In particular, it strikes me that on a personal
scale (time and distance), money is mostly conserved.  E.g. I pile up
credit card debt or buy a house and that debt sticks with me.  I either
have to pay it off or default (or die).  But is that true at all scales?

I've spent some time looking at generic books and popular magazine
articles on economics.  But they lack the clarity I need (or perhaps I'm
too thick to understand them).  And the sources for Game Theory I've
seen are too idealistic to get any real traction for an argument.

Thanks.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


============================================================
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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Marcus G. Daniels
In reply to this post by glen e. p. ropella-2
  On 9/10/10 10:42 AM, glen e. p. ropella wrote:
> I keep hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will
> have to be paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their children".
>

http://www.aei.org/article/29262



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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Douglas Roberts-2
Money, as with any commodity, is subject to a mass balance law:  What comes out = what goes in, +/- accumulation.

On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 11:21 AM, Marcus G. Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:
 On 9/10/10 10:42 AM, glen e. p. ropella wrote:
I keep hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will
have to be paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their children".


http://www.aei.org/article/29262





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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Eric Charles
In reply to this post by Vladimyr Burachynsky
Vladimyr, Glen,
Agreed!
Even in the cases where there is not forfeit or fight, however, the situation is not as bad as it seems. First, the notion that this particular nation will even be "out of debt" seems unlikely, at least unlikely in the next 50 to 100 years. Second, one of the major reasons for the government to manage inflation is because inflation devalues debt. So, on top of the other concerns brought up, it is misleading to say that we are passing the debt onto our children because, 1) the nation will continuously float debt, which in some sense means that the current debt will never really be paid off, 2) by the time my children are paying off parts of the current debt, the effective value of the debt will be much less.

The president of Penn State was shocked when a recent survey of entering freshmen showed that the vast majority expected to become millionaires. To me, the statistics seemed very realistic... with the added caveat that being a millionaire might not be very impressive at that point.

Eric


On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 01:05 PM, "Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky" <[hidden email]> wrote:
Glen, 
I share your misgivings about the current discussions regarding money,
Before the second world war there was an Austrian or Austro-Hungarian school
of economics that had substantially different ideas than is currently in
fashion. My understanding is that Brettton Woods ? agreement ,after the war,
ended the old school and started the one we now think is "Normal"
The name that sticks out is Von Mises. I have a copy somewhere but it was
thicker than my own PhD thesis and never had the courage to crack it open.

It is a little late in my life for such a dramatic shift of intellectual
pursuit..

Reading Herodotus I am convinced children rarely pay off the debts of their
forefathers and would rather emigrate or fight. Trying to extract ancient
debts from the unwilling is a nasty affair that costs more than it returns.

Solon's approach to declare bankruptcy for Athens is said to have saved the
city and heralded in a new era of Prosperity.
If money does not last forever then it seems debt is just as short lived.

Maybe others have more details or ideas to add to the discussions. Debt
crisis have been downplayed by historians I suspect because they did not
fully understand the economics or principles.



Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky
Ph.D.(Civil Eng.), M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.),
M.Sc.(Biology)

120-1053 Beaverhill Blvd.
Winnipeg, Manitoba
CANADA R2J 3R2
(204) 2548321 Phone/Fax
[hidden email]



-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf
Of glen e. p. ropella
Sent: September 10, 2010 11:42 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: [FRIAM] national debt and zero-sum games


I keep hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will
have to be paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their
children".
This oversimplification has always _seemed_ fundamentally wrong to me
... more wrong than just being an oversimplification.

It doesn't seem to me like the economy is a zero-sum game. Money isn't
subject to any conservation laws that I"m aware of. Granted, there are
economic drivers that are conserved; but money isn't one of them. So,
what literature do I need to start reading that will help me a)
understand what is and isn't conserved about debt and b) clarify this
point to those who insist on making the oversimplified argument? I'm
not convinced one way or the other; I just want to find a bit of clarity
around this soundbite. In particular, it strikes me that on a personal
scale (time and distance), money is mostly conserved. E.g. I pile up
credit card debt or buy a house and that debt sticks with me. I either
have to pay it off or default (or die). But is that true at all
scales?

I've spent some time looking at generic books and popular magazine
articles on economics. But they lack the clarity I need (or perhaps I'm
too thick to understand them). And the sources for Game Theory I've
seen are too idealistic to get any real traction for an argument.

Thanks.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


============================================================
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org
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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

George Duncan-2
Money is a strange creature. Since it is not tied to any physical entity, as it would under a gold standard, say, money can be created by central banks. This is the case in the U.S. with the Federal Reserve Board. It has meaning as a medium of exchange to the extent people are willing to accept it. The whole process is complex and the subject of study in courses on the economics of money and banking. One key policy lever that central banks have is control on the (partial) reserve requirements of banks under their jurisdiction. Also the amount of money created depends on the velocity of money, that is how often it is spent and deposit in banks who can they lend out some fraction of it (subject to the reserve requirements). This leads to the so-called multiplier effect. In toto, monetary policy in influencing the money supply can have dramatic effects on the economy, even long-term. Also, government fiscal policy when it can run deficits can also have multiplier effects. Of course, this all becomes much more complicated in a global economy with  independent monetary authorities and independent nation states making fiscal decisions about taxes and spending. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_creation for some background.

On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 11:42 AM, ERIC P. CHARLES <[hidden email]> wrote:
Vladimyr, Glen,
Agreed!
Even in the cases where there is not forfeit or fight, however, the situation is not as bad as it seems. First, the notion that this particular nation will even be "out of debt" seems unlikely, at least unlikely in the next 50 to 100 years. Second, one of the major reasons for the government to manage inflation is because inflation devalues debt. So, on top of the other concerns brought up, it is misleading to say that we are passing the debt onto our children because, 1) the nation will continuously float debt, which in some sense means that the current debt will never really be paid off, 2) by the time my children are paying off parts of the current debt, the effective value of the debt will be much less.

The president of Penn State was shocked when a recent survey of entering freshmen showed that the vast majority expected to become millionaires. To me, the statistics seemed very realistic... with the added caveat that being a millionaire might not be very impressive at that point.

Eric



On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 01:05 PM, "Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky" <[hidden email]> wrote:
Glen, 
I share your misgivings about the current discussions regarding money,
Before the second world war there was an Austrian or Austro-Hungarian school
of economics that had substantially different ideas than is currently in
fashion. My understanding is that Brettton Woods ? agreement ,after the war,
ended the old school and started the one we now think is "Normal"
The name that sticks out is Von Mises. I have a copy somewhere but it was
thicker than my own PhD thesis and never had the courage to crack it open.

It is a little late in my life for such a dramatic shift of intellectual
pursuit..

Reading Herodotus I am convinced children rarely pay off the debts of their
forefathers and would rather emigrate or fight. Trying to extract ancient
debts from the unwilling is a nasty affair that costs more than it returns.

Solon's approach to declare bankruptcy for Athens is said to have saved the
city and heralded in a new era of Prosperity.
If money does not last forever then it seems debt is just as short lived.

Maybe others have more details or ideas to add to the discussions. Debt
crisis have been downplayed by historians I suspect because they did not
fully understand the economics or principles.



Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky
Ph.D.(Civil Eng.), M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.),
M.Sc.(Biology)

120-1053 Beaverhill Blvd.
Winnipeg, Manitoba
CANADA R2J 3R2
(204) 2548321 Phone/Fax
[hidden email]



-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf
Of glen e. p. ropella
Sent: September 10, 2010 11:42 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: [FRIAM] national debt and zero-sum games


I keep hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will
have to be paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their
children".
This oversimplification has always _seemed_ fundamentally wrong to me
... more wrong than just being an oversimplification.

It doesn't seem to me like the economy is a zero-sum game. Money isn't
subject to any conservation laws that I"m aware of. Granted, there are
economic drivers that are conserved; but money isn't one of them. So,
what literature do I need to start reading that will help me a)
understand what is and isn't conserved about debt and b) clarify this
point to those who insist on making the oversimplified argument? I'm
not convinced one way or the other; I just want to find a bit of clarity
around this soundbite. In particular, it strikes me that on a personal
scale (time and distance), money is mostly conserved. E.g. I pile up
credit card debt or buy a house and that debt sticks with me. I either
have to pay it off or default (or die). But is that true at all
scales?

I've spent some time looking at generic books and popular magazine
articles on economics. But they lack the clarity I need (or perhaps I'm
too thick to understand them). And the sources for Game Theory I've
seen are too idealistic to get any real traction for an argument.

Thanks.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org



--
George Duncan
georgeduncanart.com
represented by Artistas de Santa Fe
www.artistasdesantafe.com
(505) 983-6895 

Life must be understood backwards; but... it must be lived forward.
Soren Kierkegaard


============================================================
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org
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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Vladimyr Burachynsky
In reply to this post by Eric Charles

Hi Glen ,

 

It looks in some ways that inflation is a polite way to avoid fight or flight and that used to be the jurisdiction of governments. It is not clear how governments can fiddle much anymore as lowering the bank lending rate rarely results in lowering consumer debt rates. That has been one argument for governments taking over the banking sector, no doubt the other is that it would be like giving the fox the keys to the henhouse.

 

I have argued often with people that believe gold is some kind of fixed commodity, it is not. The higher the price goes the more holes people dig looking for the stuff when the value declines people just stop digging. Gold suffers as much as any commodity; people just believe the stuff is rare sort of like the fallacious energy shortage. There is no such thing , the truth is that there is only a shortage of dirt cheap energy. I try and avoid these debates since most of the participants seem to have a belief system that entitles them to make outrageous claims that are beyond testing, much like religion.

 

So far we have tried any number of economic models with typical failures every 1 or two generations. I suppose any system based on belief without question is bound to collapse when the priests and disciples  fade away.

 

Sometimes I suspect money is a loosely correlated concept to the degree of trust people have for each other. That global trust is falling apart as we speak and the economics will follow. There does not seem to be any way a single government can reestablish basic trust on a global scale. In the 13th century people were freaking out about counterfeiters. Dante reserved a special place in the Inferno for such miscreants because he felt strongly that they were undermining God’s Order. Some of these counterfeiters were basically making less than pure gold coins by small margins. The question that was never answered was whether the States themselves were issuing less than full measure and simply looking for scapegoats. Back then anyone with a smattering of chemistry could be burned at the stake. Inflation is just a less obvious way of devaluing  currency.

 

I doubt it is a zero sum game since there are many examples of people just walking away from the table and starting new systems, the trick is to convince everyone that it is the only game in town.

 

 

 

Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky

Ph.D.(Civil Eng.), M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.), M.Sc.(Biology)

 

120-1053 Beaverhill Blvd.

Winnipeg, Manitoba

CANADA R2J 3R2 

(204) 2548321  Phone/Fax

[hidden email] 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of ERIC P. CHARLES
Sent: September 10, 2010 12:43 PM
To: friam
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] national debt and zero-sum games

 

Vladimyr, Glen,
Agreed!
Even in the cases where there is not forfeit or fight, however, the situation is not as bad as it seems. First, the notion that this particular nation will even be "out of debt" seems unlikely, at least unlikely in the next 50 to 100 years. Second, one of the major reasons for the government to manage inflation is because inflation devalues debt. So, on top of the other concerns brought up, it is misleading to say that we are passing the debt onto our children because, 1) the nation will continuously float debt, which in some sense means that the current debt will never really be paid off, 2) by the time my children are paying off parts of the current debt, the effective value of the debt will be much less.

The president of Penn State was shocked when a recent survey of entering freshmen showed that the vast majority expected to become millionaires. To me, the statistics seemed very realistic... with the added caveat that being a millionaire might not be very impressive at that point.

Eric


On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 01:05 PM, "Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky" <[hidden email]> wrote:

 
Glen, 
I share your misgivings about the current discussions regarding
money,
Before the second world war there was an Austrian or Austro-Hungarian
school
of economics that had substantially different ideas than is currently
in
fashion. My understanding is that Brettton Woods ? agreement ,after the
war,
ended the old school and started the one we now think is
"Normal"
The name that sticks out is Von Mises. I have a copy somewhere but
it was
thicker than my own PhD thesis and never had the courage to crack it
open. 

It is a little late in my life for such a dramatic shift of
intellectual
pursuit..

Reading Herodotus I am convinced children
rarely pay off the debts of their
forefathers and would rather emigrate or
fight. Trying to extract ancient
debts from the unwilling is a nasty affair
that costs more than it returns.

Solon's approach to declare bankruptcy
for Athens is said to have saved the
city and heralded in a new era of
Prosperity. 
If money does not last forever then it seems debt is just as
short lived.

Maybe others have more details or ideas to add to the
discussions. Debt
crisis have been downplayed by historians I suspect
because they did not
fully understand the economics or principles.



 
Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky
Ph.D.(Civil Eng.),
M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.),
M.Sc.(Biology)
 
120-1053 Beaverhill
Blvd.
Winnipeg, Manitoba
CANADA R2J 3R2
(204) 2548321
Phone/Fax
[hidden email]
 
 

-----Original
Message-----
From: [hidden email]
[mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf
Of glen e. p. ropella
Sent:
September 10, 2010 11:42 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee
Group
Subject: [FRIAM] national debt and zero-sum games


I keep
hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will
have to be
paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their
children".
 This
oversimplification has always _seemed_ fundamentally wrong to me
... more
wrong than just being an oversimplification.

It doesn't seem to me like
the economy is a zero-sum game.  Money isn't
subject to any conservation
laws that I"m aware of.  Granted, there are
economic drivers that are
conserved; but money isn't one of them.  So,
what literature do I need to
start reading that will help me a)
understand what is and isn't conserved
about debt and b) clarify this
point to those who insist on making the
oversimplified argument?  I'm
not convinced one way or the other; I just
want to find a bit of clarity
around this soundbite.  In particular, it
strikes me that on a personal
scale (time and distance), money is mostly
conserved.  E.g. I pile up
credit card debt or buy a house and that debt
sticks with me.  I either
have to pay it off or default (or die).  But is
that true at all
scales?

I've spent some time looking at generic
books and popular magazine
articles on economics.  But they lack the clarity
I need (or perhaps I'm
too thick to understand them).  And the sources for
Game Theory I've
seen are too idealistic to get any real traction for an
argument.

Thanks.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095,
http://agent-based-modeling.com

============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org
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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

glen e. p. ropella-2

This gets right to the heart of the matter, I think.  Despite our
obvious ability to artificially assert money as a (somewhat) universal
metric for value/quality _and_ despite the natural "inertia" provided by
indexing the value of lots and lots of various commodities with money,
it still all boils down to trust of some kind.

One of the benefits of neoliberalism (which I think is called
neoconservatism by some folks) is the perspective that the more fluid
the system, the better off we all are.  I think this is why I've heard
people claim that capitalism (I suspect the Austrian economics type you
referred to earlier) does _not_ believe the economy is a zero sum game.
 Their idea seems to be based on an assumption of the open endedness of
the universe.  The idea that there is no "bottom turtle".  As soon as we
put some rules into place, "life will find a way" to circumvent those rules.

It seems like there are, however, temporal or spatial scales of robust
mechanisms of trust.  So, while the young may not trust the old and the
old may not trust the young, within each group, there is enough
validation (the "other" behaves according to the behavior I induce from
my samples) for local trust.  The same is true of money.

So, perhaps it's a case of local: zero-sum, non-local: non-zero-sum?

Then again, it could be that I have a hammer and everything looks like a
nail to me. ;-)

Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky wrote circa 10-09-10 03:04 PM:

> Sometimes I suspect money is a loosely correlated concept to the degree of
> trust people have for each other. That global trust is falling apart as we
> speak and the economics will follow. There does not seem to be any way a
> single government can reestablish basic trust on a global scale. In the 13th
> century people were freaking out about counterfeiters. Dante reserved a
> special place in the Inferno for such miscreants because he felt strongly
> that they were undermining God's Order. Some of these counterfeiters were
> basically making less than pure gold coins by small margins. The question
> that was never answered was whether the States themselves were issuing less
> than full measure and simply looking for scapegoats. Back then anyone with a
> smattering of chemistry could be burned at the stake. Inflation is just a
> less obvious way of devaluing  currency.
>
>  
>
> I doubt it is a zero sum game since there are many examples of people just
> walking away from the table and starting new systems, the trick is to
> convince everyone that it is the only game in town.


--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


============================================================
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org
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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Stephen Thompson
In reply to this post by Vladimyr Burachynsky
For a small-bite consumption of economics look at the blog of Dr Paul Krugman
professor of finance at Princeton and Nobel Prize winner.  He writes a blog and
opinion column at the NYT (free access).   

Read his blog and columns for a month and you will find topical discussions on economics.
Over that time you will pick up information about larger economic issues and theory that based
on my undergrad and grad training I can say "oh yea, that rings a bell". 

Its called Conscience of a Liberal. 
BLOG:       http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/

Opinion:     http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/paulkrugman/index.html

He has also written a textbook on economics available at Amazon 

http://www.amazon.com/Economics-Paul-Krugman/dp/0716771586/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1284158683&sr=1-1


Yes, people will claim, rightly so, that Dr Krugman has a liberal bias.  But he presents his opinion
and backs it up with data that can be verified or refuted.  You can not say that about most of the
conservative politicians who rant about what economic policies need to be implemented - even
when their *notions* are contrary to established economic cause-n-effect. 

When he says tax cuts or supply-side economics, which benefit the very wealthy, are failed or
will not benefit the current economic malaise, he doesn't claim hurt for the middle or lower economic
classes.  He provides data showing the policy promoted by conservatives will **not** meet the goal
the conservatives are claiming to achieve.  He shows the spending/saving/etc patterns of certain groups
and why giving them *stimulus* funds will or will not stimulate the economy. 

If someone finds an equivalent "conservative" economist blog I will add that to the mix to compare.
Actually, Dr Krugman references such conservative sites (usually politicians or pundits) who
blather claiming they espouse economic policy.  Dr K rationally refutes their comments - with
facts and diagrams from independent data sources. 

I took macro econ as an undergrad and a class on the Federal Banking System in grad school (MBA).
I have been an investment analyst for 26 years (commercial mortgage loans).  So from an
econ-theory standpoint I consider myself an "informed consumer" of economic policy
discussions, but by no means claim any expertise in economics.

Stephen Thompson  (lurker)
MBA Finance
MS Software Engineering





On 9/10/2010 5:04 PM, Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky wrote:

Hi Glen ,

 

It looks in some ways that inflation is a polite way to avoid fight or flight and that used to be the jurisdiction of governments. It is not clear how governments can fiddle much anymore as lowering the bank lending rate rarely results in lowering consumer debt rates. That has been one argument for governments taking over the banking sector, no doubt the other is that it would be like giving the fox the keys to the henhouse.

 

I have argued often with people that believe gold is some kind of fixed commodity, it is not. The higher the price goes the more holes people dig looking for the stuff when the value declines people just stop digging. Gold suffers as much as any commodity; people just believe the stuff is rare sort of like the fallacious energy shortage. There is no such thing , the truth is that there is only a shortage of dirt cheap energy. I try and avoid these debates since most of the participants seem to have a belief system that entitles them to make outrageous claims that are beyond testing, much like religion.

 

So far we have tried any number of economic models with typical failures every 1 or two generations. I suppose any system based on belief without question is bound to collapse when the priests and disciples  fade away.

 

Sometimes I suspect money is a loosely correlated concept to the degree of trust people have for each other. That global trust is falling apart as we speak and the economics will follow. There does not seem to be any way a single government can reestablish basic trust on a global scale. In the 13th century people were freaking out about counterfeiters. Dante reserved a special place in the Inferno for such miscreants because he felt strongly that they were undermining God’s Order. Some of these counterfeiters were basically making less than pure gold coins by small margins. The question that was never answered was whether the States themselves were issuing less than full measure and simply looking for scapegoats. Back then anyone with a smattering of chemistry could be burned at the stake. Inflation is just a less obvious way of devaluing  currency.

 

I doubt it is a zero sum game since there are many examples of people just walking away from the table and starting new systems, the trick is to convince everyone that it is the only game in town.

 

 

 

Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky

Ph.D.(Civil Eng.), M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.), M.Sc.(Biology)

 

120-1053 Beaverhill Blvd.

Winnipeg, Manitoba

CANADA R2J 3R2 

(204) 2548321  Phone/Fax

[hidden email] 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email] [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of ERIC P. CHARLES
Sent: September 10, 2010 12:43 PM
To: friam
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] national debt and zero-sum games

 

Vladimyr, Glen,
Agreed!
Even in the cases where there is not forfeit or fight, however, the situation is not as bad as it seems. First, the notion that this particular nation will even be "out of debt" seems unlikely, at least unlikely in the next 50 to 100 years. Second, one of the major reasons for the government to manage inflation is because inflation devalues debt. So, on top of the other concerns brought up, it is misleading to say that we are passing the debt onto our children because, 1) the nation will continuously float debt, which in some sense means that the current debt will never really be paid off, 2) by the time my children are paying off parts of the current debt, the effective value of the debt will be much less.

The president of Penn State was shocked when a recent survey of entering freshmen showed that the vast majority expected to become millionaires. To me, the statistics seemed very realistic... with the added caveat that being a millionaire might not be very impressive at that point.

Eric


On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 01:05 PM, "Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky" [hidden email] wrote:

 
Glen, 

I share your misgivings about the current discussions regarding
money,

Before the second world war there was an Austrian or Austro-Hungarian
school

of economics that had substantially different ideas than is currently
in

fashion. My understanding is that Brettton Woods ? agreement ,after the
war,

ended the old school and started the one we now think is
"Normal"

The name that sticks out is Von Mises. I have a copy somewhere but
it was

thicker than my own PhD thesis and never had the courage to crack it
open. 



It is a little late in my life for such a dramatic shift of
intellectual

pursuit.. 



Reading Herodotus I am convinced children
rarely pay off the debts of their

forefathers and would rather emigrate or
fight. Trying to extract ancient

debts from the unwilling is a nasty affair
that costs more than it returns.



Solon's approach to declare bankruptcy
for Athens is said to have saved the

city and heralded in a new era of
Prosperity. 

If money does not last forever then it seems debt is just as
short lived.



Maybe others have more details or ideas to add to the
discussions. Debt

crisis have been downplayed by historians I suspect
because they did not

fully understand the economics or principles. 







 

Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky

Ph.D.(Civil Eng.),
M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.),

M.Sc.(Biology)

 

120-1053 Beaverhill
Blvd.

Winnipeg, Manitoba

CANADA R2J 3R2 

(204) 2548321 
Phone/Fax

[hidden email] 

 

 



-----Original
Message-----

From: [hidden email]
[[hidden email]] On Behalf

Of glen e. p. ropella

Sent:
September 10, 2010 11:42 AM

To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee
Group

Subject: [FRIAM] national debt and zero-sum games





I keep
hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will

have to be
paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their

children".

 This
oversimplification has always _seemed_ fundamentally wrong to me

... more
wrong than just being an oversimplification.



It doesn't seem to me like
the economy is a zero-sum game.  Money isn't

subject to any conservation
laws that I"m aware of.  Granted, there are

economic drivers that are
conserved; but money isn't one of them.  So,

what literature do I need to
start reading that will help me a)

understand what is and isn't conserved
about debt and b) clarify this

point to those who insist on making the
oversimplified argument?  I'm

not convinced one way or the other; I just
want to find a bit of clarity

around this soundbite.  In particular, it
strikes me that on a personal

scale (time and distance), money is mostly
conserved.  E.g. I pile up

credit card debt or buy a house and that debt
sticks with me.  I either

have to pay it off or default (or die).  But is
that true at all

scales?



I've spent some time looking at generic
books and popular magazine

articles on economics.  But they lack the clarity
I need (or perhaps I'm

too thick to understand them).  And the sources for
Game Theory I've

seen are too idealistic to get any real traction for an
argument.



Thanks.



-- 

glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095,
http://agent-based-modeling.com
============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

glen e. p. ropella-2
Stephen Thompson wrote circa 10-09-10 04:08 PM:
> Its called Conscience of a Liberal.
> BLOG: http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/

Cool!  Thanks.  I've placed it in my RSS aggregator.  Of course, that
doesn't mean I'll be industrious enough to actually read it. ;-)  But
I'll try.  Maybe by the 2012 election, I'll have a more fact-informed
opinion.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

David Eric Smith
Glen, hi,

Many helpful (to me) posts, following on your question.

In conversations with Jim Rutt here on similar questions, he  
recommended the attached summary to me:





He claims it is to the point, and factually accurate.  I need to read  
it, but have not yet.

All best,

Eric


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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Vladimyr Burachynsky
In reply to this post by glen e. p. ropella-2
Gentlemen,
Curiously I recall that the natives of the Canadian West Coast had a culture
based on debt. Lavish gifts were presented at potlatches that appeared to
court total poverty but the culture seemed to view debt of this type as
prestige since the recipient was expected to out do the giver at the next
potlatch and was shamed if unable to ante up. Western thinkers concluded
that it was a suicidal culture and the Canadian government stopped the
practice which is now considered to have nearly destroyed the entire
culture. For some reason this social organization survived for centuries
without white interference and I have no idea how it stabilized itself and
actually created a highly innovative society. There have been many other
strange variants on social wealth distribution but I suspect they were
indeed local and trust was stabilized which seems  to be the key .

All systems are based on trust and lack of such spells failure for all
systems. Currency is not the basic principle but rather trust which can
create any of a multitude of systems.(It could be argued weakly that copper
served that purpose until white men arrived with steel) Gold may be an
attempt to base a system on the lack of trust. Which is interesting since it
depends on it anyway.

Experts on game theory please comment, Is the Japanese board game considered
a Non-Zero sum game?

 
 
Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky
Ph.D.(Civil Eng.), M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.), M.Sc.(Biology)
 
120-1053 Beaverhill Blvd.
Winnipeg, Manitoba
CANADA R2J 3R2
(204) 2548321  Phone/Fax
[hidden email]
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf
Of glen e. p. ropella
Sent: September 10, 2010 6:17 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] national debt and zero-sum games

Stephen Thompson wrote circa 10-09-10 04:08 PM:
> Its called Conscience of a Liberal.
> BLOG: http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/

Cool!  Thanks.  I've placed it in my RSS aggregator.  Of course, that
doesn't mean I'll be industrious enough to actually read it. ;-)  But
I'll try.  Maybe by the 2012 election, I'll have a more fact-informed
opinion.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


============================================================
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Stephen Thompson
In reply to this post by David Eric Smith

I recall an undergrad chemistry professor at the Univ of Minn
who after several minutes of absorbed lecture and diagramming
on the chalkboard would half-turn and say "...is that right?" 

Then he would theatrically sigh out loud and say".. I'm used to discussions with
graduate students.   You are all freshman...of COURSE its right,
I'm TELLING you its right!".  We chuckled as he turned and plunged into the next
topic.

Eric's summary looks to be quite detailed on the concepts of M1and other
definitions of money supply - and how money flows through the banking system.
I have only read the first two pages.  Metaphorically, I am back in the
undergraduate auditorium scribbling notes as Professor C. F. Reserve
turns and with head half-tilted exasperatedly signs, "..of course its right..."  

Steph T





On 9/10/2010 7:14 PM, Eric Smith wrote:
Glen, hi,

Many helpful (to me) posts, following on your question.

In conversations with Jim Rutt here on similar questions, he recommended the attached summary to me:




He claims it is to the point, and factually accurate.  I need to read it, but have not yet.

All best,

Eric

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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Robert J. Cordingley
In reply to this post by glen e. p. ropella-2
Here's what my Financial Advisor, Davis Waldo,  had to say:
One has to draw a distinction between contracts between private parties, where the debt must be liquidated via payback or default, and debt where a government obligates itself to pay back in a fiat currency that they can produce at will.  These rarely are liquidated or completely defaulted on, but the purchasing power of the fiat currency in which it is paid off is not specified in the bargain, unless you're dealing with some kind of inflation indexed security.
There are some exceptions, like when the government changes so radically that they repudiate all obligations made by the former government, i.e. Russian revolution.  I have one of these bonds issued by the Imperial Government of Russia in 1909.  Its beautiful and worthless, except for collecting.
Thanks
Robert C

On 9/10/10 10:42 AM, glen e. p. ropella wrote:
I keep hearing people claim that any debt the US builds/acquires will
have to be paid (or defaulted on) by "our children and their children".
 This oversimplification has always _seemed_ fundamentally wrong to me
... more wrong than just being an oversimplification.

It doesn't seem to me like the economy is a zero-sum game.  Money isn't
subject to any conservation laws that I"m aware of.  Granted, there are
economic drivers that are conserved; but money isn't one of them.  So,
what literature do I need to start reading that will help me a)
understand what is and isn't conserved about debt and b) clarify this
point to those who insist on making the oversimplified argument?  I'm
not convinced one way or the other; I just want to find a bit of clarity
around this soundbite.  In particular, it strikes me that on a personal
scale (time and distance), money is mostly conserved.  E.g. I pile up
credit card debt or buy a house and that debt sticks with me.  I either
have to pay it off or default (or die).  But is that true at all scales?

I've spent some time looking at generic books and popular magazine
articles on economics.  But they lack the clarity I need (or perhaps I'm
too thick to understand them).  And the sources for Game Theory I've
seen are too idealistic to get any real traction for an argument.

Thanks.


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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

glen e. p. ropella-2

Sorry if I'm beating a dead horse... I think I saw it move.  I'm still
trying, in my own lazy way, to figure this out.  Here's Warren Buffett:

"You can't go broke if you issue debt in your own currency."

"If Greece could print its own currency, you might have enormous
inflation, but you'd never have a default on debt now."

   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eA68Kl77gzE

My gut tells me this isn't quite true... or there are details he's
leaving out.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Eric Charles
In reply to this post by Robert J. Cordingley
Glen,
He is correct, with one unspoken addition: You can't go broke if you can print your own money AND the creditor will accept it.

If you have a bookie who accepts RopellaBucks and pays in green backs, you will be good forever! If Greece can borrow dollars and pay in their own currency, same deal.

I'm not sure how international borrowing works, but eventually someone will stop accepting your currency if it has devalued too much. At some point after that, other people will stop trading for it too, so you won't even be able to convert your RopellaBucks into usable currency. Then, in the long run, you might be even more screwed than the semi-screwed you are in the short run from being stuck on the Euro, with no ability to escalate printing.

Eric


On Thu, Oct 7, 2010 02:14 PM, "glen e. p. ropella" <[hidden email]> wrote:
Sorry if I'm beating a dead horse... I think I saw it move.  I'm still
trying, in my own lazy way, to figure this out.  Here's Warren Buffett:

"You can't go broke if you issue debt in your own currency."

"If Greece could print its own currency, you might have enormous
inflation, but you'd never have a default on debt now."

   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eA68Kl77gzE

My gut tells me this isn't quite true... or there are details he's
leaving out.

-- 
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


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http://www.friam.org

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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

glen e. p. ropella-2

Excellent point.  For whatever reason, I hadn't explicitly formed that
minor premise: "somebody has to credit the debt".  That seems like a
pretty big minor premise to the syllogism to me.  Of course, there are
lots of reasons you might loan to someone who has little chance of
paying you back _if_ you've got the extra cash to do so.  Control/power
is the obvious reason.

Thanks.

ERIC P. CHARLES wrote circa 10-10-07 12:50 PM:

> Glen,
> He is correct, with one unspoken addition: You can't go broke if you can print
> your own money AND the creditor will accept it.
>
> If you have a bookie who accepts RopellaBucks and pays in green backs, you will
> be good forever! If Greece can borrow dollars and pay in their own currency,
> same deal.
>
> I'm not sure how international borrowing works, but eventually someone will
> stop accepting your currency if it has devalued too much. At some point after
> that, other people will stop trading for it too, so you won't even be able to
> convert your RopellaBucks into usable currency. Then, in the long run, you
> might be even more screwed than the semi-screwed you are in the short run from
> being stuck on the Euro, with no ability to escalate printing.


--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com


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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Scott R. Powell
As I recall, Russia's worst economic problem in the mid-1990s was that
the ruble's convertibility was as bad internally as externally.

I've just finished reading Liaquat Ahamed's Pulitzer Prize-winning
"Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World" (Benjamin Strong,
Montagu Norman, Emile Moreau & Hjalmar Schacht). Fascinating read on
the years just prior to WW1, the consequences of Versailles, the
mirage of the Gold Standard and the go-go years leading to the Great
Depression.

Interestingly enough, Germany just made its final Great War reparation
payment last month.

Scott

On Thu, Oct 7, 2010 at 3:34 PM, glen e. p. ropella
<[hidden email]> wrote:

>
> Excellent point.  For whatever reason, I hadn't explicitly formed that
> minor premise: "somebody has to credit the debt".  That seems like a
> pretty big minor premise to the syllogism to me.  Of course, there are
> lots of reasons you might loan to someone who has little chance of
> paying you back _if_ you've got the extra cash to do so.  Control/power
> is the obvious reason.
>
> Thanks.
>
> ERIC P. CHARLES wrote circa 10-10-07 12:50 PM:
> > Glen,
> > He is correct, with one unspoken addition: You can't go broke if you can print
> > your own money AND the creditor will accept it.
> >
> > If you have a bookie who accepts RopellaBucks and pays in green backs, you will
> > be good forever! If Greece can borrow dollars and pay in their own currency,
> > same deal.
> >
> > I'm not sure how international borrowing works, but eventually someone will
> > stop accepting your currency if it has devalued too much. At some point after
> > that, other people will stop trading for it too, so you won't even be able to
> > convert your RopellaBucks into usable currency. Then, in the long run, you
> > might be even more screwed than the semi-screwed you are in the short run from
> > being stuck on the Euro, with no ability to escalate printing.
>
>
> --
> glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://agent-based-modeling.com
>
>
> ============================================================
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
> lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Sarbajit Roy (testing)
In reply to this post by Eric Charles
>He is correct, with one unspoken addition: You can't go broke if you can print your own money AND the creditor will accept it.

>If you have a bookie who accepts RopellaBucks and pays in green backs, you will be good forever! If Greece can borrow dollars and pay in their own currency, same deal.

1) This is a compelling argument for a return to the Gold Standard.
2) Substitute "UncleSam" for "Ropella" and add the following "walk softly and carry a big stick to beat up weak nations and then compel them to buy little sticks to 'defend' themselves which they must pay for in Ropella (sorry US) bucks".

On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 1:20 AM, ERIC P. CHARLES <[hidden email]> wrote:
Glen,
He is correct, with one unspoken addition: You can't go broke if you can print your own money AND the creditor will accept it.

If you have a bookie who accepts RopellaBucks and pays in green backs, you will be good forever! If Greece can borrow dollars and pay in their own currency, same deal.

I'm not sure how international borrowing works, but eventually someone will stop accepting your currency if it has devalued too much. At some point after that, other people will stop trading for it too, so you won't even be able to convert your RopellaBucks into usable currency. Then, in the long run, you might be even more screwed than the semi-screwed you are in the short run from being stuck on the Euro, with no ability to escalate printing.

Eric



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Re: national debt and zero-sum games

Scott R. Powell
That is the main reason that there was a Gold Standard in the first place and it  did work a hundred years ago. But the Gold Standard became a completely inadequate and illusory means of providing currency stability in the decade following World War I. Clinging to it was certainly a factor in the collapse of the world's economies in the early 30s

As alluring as a return to it might seem, it would be a hundredfold less adequate now.

Scott

Sent from my iPhone


On Oct 7, 2010, at 8:01 PM, Sarbajit Roy <[hidden email]> wrote:

>He is correct, with one unspoken addition: You can't go broke if you can print your own money AND the creditor will accept it.

>If you have a bookie who accepts RopellaBucks and pays in green backs, you will be good forever! If Greece can borrow dollars and pay in their own currency, same deal.

1) This is a compelling argument for a return to the Gold Standard.
2) Substitute "UncleSam" for "Ropella" and add the following "walk softly and carry a big stick to beat up weak nations and then compel them to buy little sticks to 'defend' themselves which they must pay for in Ropella (sorry US) bucks".

On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 1:20 AM, ERIC P. CHARLES <[hidden email]> wrote:
Glen,
He is correct, with one unspoken addition: You can't go broke if you can print your own money AND the creditor will accept it.

If you have a bookie who accepts RopellaBucks and pays in green backs, you will be good forever! If Greece can borrow dollars and pay in their own currency, same deal.

I'm not sure how international borrowing works, but eventually someone will stop accepting your currency if it has devalued too much. At some point after that, other people will stop trading for it too, so you won't even be able to convert your RopellaBucks into usable currency. Then, in the long run, you might be even more screwed than the semi-screwed you are in the short run from being stuck on the Euro, with no ability to escalate printing.

Eric


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