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RankineCycle's avatar

It's time to stop talking about "debt" as if it's actually any sort of debt, it's not. What we refer to as "US debt" is actually just money supply. When US "debt" is held by private individuals, it's just our savings. When its held by foreign governments, it's no different than holding cash.

Look at Japan, who has "purchased" their debt by printing money. These financial instruments are completely fungible. And it's fundamentally not "debt" because the US can *never* involuntarily default on the debt. And if the US did decide to default on some it's "debt," it would only be like burning some cash of the T-bill holder, instead of printing money to back it.

Foreign governments are gobbling up T-bills at *negative* interest rates. That's because more people want to be able to exchange things in dollars, and the T-bills are preferred to holding cash. We could also just print dollars, and get them out in circulation through government spending, or by buying back existing T-bills with those dollars.

Calling this stuff "debt" is just deceptive, and leads to bad policy. We need to start calling it "money supply." Our "debt" is really just printing money, with the side effect of the government setting the minimum borrowing rate that banks will borrow at. T-bills are just dollar bills with interest side effects.

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Eevee Hatsumi🔹's avatar

> We need the top minds working on this now, not waiting until after disaster strikes and then analyzing it after the fact!

This sounds a lot like longtermist effective altruists' calls to work on reducing existential risks now, since we *cannot* wait until an "existential" disaster (either extinction or an equally bad outcome like the permanent collapse of civilization) destroys our whole future to start preventing it.

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