gold sales not anonymous, improving Taylor
Here in SC, the coin shops keep a paper copy of your drivers license for a while, supposedly to verify that the coins are not stolen. Then they destroy the record. So there is at least a temporary record of your name and what coin you sold. There is some logic in this, but it is certainly a sacrifice of freedom.
Taylor has a nice article showing how if the FED followed his rule, the higher rates would have prevented a housing bubble. No secret that rates were too low, except to Bernanke et. al.
I think I figured out a way to improve the taylor rule. It is based on measured inflation and measured gdp.
Well, what if the measurments are off? Likely the government would bias towards higher gdp growth and lower inflation, as Williams claims. Then the taylor rule will keep interest rates too low. So what is needed is to add an additional term to the expression, which measures either debt growth or money supply growth . In our system, money supply and debt are highly correlated . The idea being that if debt grows above a certain level, interest rates rise. Right now the taylor rule does not explicity include debt or money supply growth, and so it does nothing to prevent a gradual increase in debt level, which is what happened from 1980 to 2008.
Originally posted by ProdigyofZen
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Taylor has a nice article showing how if the FED followed his rule, the higher rates would have prevented a housing bubble. No secret that rates were too low, except to Bernanke et. al.
I think I figured out a way to improve the taylor rule. It is based on measured inflation and measured gdp.
Well, what if the measurments are off? Likely the government would bias towards higher gdp growth and lower inflation, as Williams claims. Then the taylor rule will keep interest rates too low. So what is needed is to add an additional term to the expression, which measures either debt growth or money supply growth . In our system, money supply and debt are highly correlated . The idea being that if debt grows above a certain level, interest rates rise. Right now the taylor rule does not explicity include debt or money supply growth, and so it does nothing to prevent a gradual increase in debt level, which is what happened from 1980 to 2008.
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