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marmar

(77,091 posts)
Wed Jul 25, 2012, 03:34 PM Jul 2012

Recharge the economy: U of Michigan prof proposes boosting economy with government plastic


from the Detroit Metro Times:



Recharge the economy
U-M prof proposes boosting economy with government plastic

By William Greider
Published: July 25, 2012


Rome is burning while Congress fiddles. The president is out on the road trying to secure a second term, while the economy once again teeters on the brink of bad possibilities. The governors of the Federal Reserve Board seem to understand this better than most of Washington's power hitters. But what can the Fed do? The central bank has already dispensed trillions to the financial system and pulled interest rates down to rock-bottom levels. Yet the economy doesn't respond. Banks won't lend, businesses won't hire. Anxious consumers stopped buying, the order books are bare.

Miles Kimball, an imaginative economics professor at the University of Michigan, has stepped forward to propose an ingenious solution for the Fed's dilemma. The government should create a "federal credit card" and send one to every adult in the nation, enabling each person to borrow $2,000 at a very low interest rate and not pay back any of the money until after the economy has fully recovered. The provocative kicker in Kimball's proposal is that the Federal Reserve would itself provide the financing, not Congress or the president through the federal budget. And he argues that the central bank can do this with its unique power to create money.

A federal line of credit, Kimball suggests, could become a new, fast-acting channel for economic stimulus — more potent than the usual methods like tax rebates, and far less costly. That's because consumers would not get any benefit from this government assistance unless they use the card — that is, borrow and spend — and do so before the government's offer expires. After all, this is exactly what the economy needs. Why give the money in tax breaks for banks or businesses, which may not use it for the intended purpose? Why not deliver the aid to consumers, who will?

Kimball argues that this novel approach could deliver a strong, quick jolt to the stagnant economy, $400 billion or more. Yet it would add very little to the federal budget deficit, because the Federal Reserve operates under its own, independent balance sheet. Further, it's not free money but a temporary loan, like the trillions in short-term loans the Federal Reserve gave the banking system at the height of the crisis. ................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://metrotimes.com/columns/recharge-the-economy-1.1347766



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Recharge the economy: U of Michigan prof proposes boosting economy with government plastic (Original Post) marmar Jul 2012 OP
Hell, sounds like a good idea ! russspeakeasy Jul 2012 #1
"the central bank can do this with its unique power to create money" demwing Jul 2012 #2
 

demwing

(16,916 posts)
2. "the central bank can do this with its unique power to create money"
Wed Jul 25, 2012, 06:45 PM
Jul 2012

So maybe I'm missing something here, but wouldn't adding nearly $500 billion in "new money" devalue the dollar?

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