Re: Reich is right.
Actually, GJ, what Dr. Michael Hudson points out is that your credit scheme cannot work unless the existing cash flows are redirected into the banks.
Specifically - if the government has X % of public cash flow - for example property tax, the banks cannot create an asset price spiral unless the X % of property taxes are reduced to Y. The difference (X-Y) is then what drives additional debt which in turn drives up asset prices.
Without low taxes, there isn't the cash flow to start a bubble. After all, the credit which created our last 2 bubbles was created by banks, not by the Fed although certainly the Fed encouraged it.
Only now is the Fed directly creating credit... or re-creating credit.
Originally posted by grapejelly
Specifically - if the government has X % of public cash flow - for example property tax, the banks cannot create an asset price spiral unless the X % of property taxes are reduced to Y. The difference (X-Y) is then what drives additional debt which in turn drives up asset prices.
Without low taxes, there isn't the cash flow to start a bubble. After all, the credit which created our last 2 bubbles was created by banks, not by the Fed although certainly the Fed encouraged it.
Only now is the Fed directly creating credit... or re-creating credit.
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