Quote:
Originally Posted by Baraka_Guru
Do you know what currencies are pegged to? Market value. With the exception of China (and probably a few others), who manipulates their currency unfairly, nations are at the mercy of what markets will pay for their currency. The U.S. "simply" doesn't print money to repay debts because that would further devalue the Greenback, which is something they want to avoid. The current value isn't all bad. The depressed value makes it easier for domestic U.S. companies to export to those who would take advantage of a higher purchasing power for American goods.
Generally, most nations don't necessarily want a "high" or "low" value for their currency; what they want is a value they can manage. They want a stable value, rather than volatility. They want to influence the money supply when they strive for certain goals.
The quantitative easing isn't illogical; it's merely risky. The hope is to bolster the stock markets, which essentially infuses an economy with needed cash to produce and expand. The risk is devaluing the currency without that effect.
Economics is tough. In a way it's like trying to herd cats.
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money only makes barter elegant - basic premise is always equal value...and i am sure this is not too hazy or currencies are just arbitrary values ? - and why would countries accept each others currencies..without knowing how they value their currency.. simply printing without any real linkage to real "value" i.e goods or assets means what ?? - there has to be a link, or countries like the US could simply print more dollars and keep their currency strong, pay people in dollars for consumer goods -- they are getting paid or buying a stake in the dollar! - now if everyone has a large amount of dollars, who will want the USD to crash...obviously they want to collect!- in a truly globalized scenario i assume people would can buy up US assets !- here again the US imposes restrictions on investment...50% tax on gains i beleive ? -- but more USD = inflation, your property appreciates but your gains are again in USD as well, BUT - the strong USD allows US investors to pick up assets cheaply abroad..
above likely has holes in it - but i dont see them or wouldnt post here.. pick holes for me.