Balzac89
Undercover Mod
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/jan/28/jp-morgan-employee-fell-to-death-named-gabriel-magee
VP of technology investment division
VP of technology investment division
In a world of fiat currency, there is no difference between credit and money. So in essence, when a bank extends you credit, it is creating money. It all spends exactly the same. When was the last time you purchased a new car or a home with cash?Some mistakenly believe banks create money; this is wrong, they merely extend credit but still need to find reserves inevitably from the source to pad those double-entry ledgers.
2013 super low last JuneIn a world of fiat currency, there is no difference between credit and money. So in essence, when a bank extends you credit, it is creating money. It all spends exactly the same. When was the last time you purchased a new car or a home with cash?
If that were true, banks would not need to find reserves to buffer their underwriting activities (even though the reserve ratio is an arbitrary number, it is not zero).In a world of fiat currency, there is no difference between credit and money. So in essence, when a bank extends you credit, it is creating money. It all spends exactly the same. When was the last time you purchased a new car or a home with cash?
Can it be that bad? I guess it was....for him.http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/jan/28/jp-morgan-employee-fell-to-death-named-gabriel-magee
VP of technology investment division
No one cares about the mobile home you got for $20 from the neighborhood drunk.2013 super low last June
So, are you under the belief that Banks only lend out what they have in deposits?If that were true, banks would not need to find reserves to buffer their underwriting activities (even though the reserve ratio is an arbitrary number, it is not zero).
No, and how you extrapolate that from my comments is a mystery or an attempt at diversion.So, are you under the belief that Banks only lend out what they have in deposits?
Whats with all this TLDR? NONE of it speaks to your assumption that banks do not create money. Why did you post it? It must be a mystery or an attempt at diversion.No, and how you extrapolate that from my comments is a mystery or an attempt at diversion.
Here's some interesting notes from the book I'm reading.
Innovation is not going to come from large leaps in technology. Rather it is going to come from the amalgamation of seemingly dissimilar processes or concepts.
Take the following websites, for example:
http://www.innocentive.com/
http://www.kaggle.com/
Companies, or other organizations (public or private), can post problems on those sites and through the magic of "billions of eyeballs" solutions are found, with remunerative rewards even!
People solving problems and bringing "progress" without even being specialists in those particular fields is the way of the future.
[HR][/HR]The innovation scholars Lars Bo Jeppesen and Karim Lakhani studied 166 scientific problems posted to Innocentive, all of which had stumped their home organizations. They found that the crowd assembled around Innocentive was able to solve forty-nine of them, for a success rate of 30 percent.
They also found that people whose expertise was far away from the apparent domain of the problem were more likely to submit winning solutions. In other words, it seemed to actually help a solver to be 'marginal'--to have education, training, and experience that were not obviously relevant for the problem.
[HR][/HR]--The Second Machine Age pgs.82-3
The two great "one time events" which will change the world, in the manner that Watt's steam engine did, will be "real, useful Artificial Intelligence (AI) and the connection of most of the people on the planet via a common digital network."
The latter can already be seen as manifesting via the internet, but AI?
Remember Watson, the computer that kicked the shit out of those Jeopardy champs? It is now being "trained to sit on top of all of the world's high-quality published medical information; match it against patients' symptoms, medical histories, and test results; and formulate both a diagnosis and a treatment plan."
"IBM estimates that it would take a human doctor 160 hours of reading each and every week just to keep up with the relevant new literature."
And that's just one heavy example. This is why white-collar workers have more to fear than blue-collars. There are "news articles" circulating about written by computers! You wouldn't even realize it, although, they are limited to writing drole, mundane pieces, mostly for stories about finance, etc. As far as I know, there are no great op-eds written by robots...yet.
Anyway, that's an essential summary of a couple chapters. I'll finish this with a couple interesting quotes, one of which I found surprising. See if you can figure out which one it is.
[HR][/HR]"Most economic fallacies derive from the tendency to assume that there is a fixed pie, that one party can gain only at the expense of another."
--Milton Friedman
"The Gross National Product does not include the beauty of our poetry or the intelligence of our public debate. It measures neither our wit nor our courage, neither our wisdom nor our learning, neither our compassion nor our devotion. It measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile."
--Robert F. Kennedy
[HR][/HR]
Whats with all this TLDR? NONE of it speaks to your assumption that banks do not create money. Why did you post it? It must be a mystery or an attempt at diversion.
Even if that was true, at least he has a job. You are on rollitup all day. Im sure you are a welfare baby. Uncle sam pays for your fat ass to argue with people all day(and I do mean ALL DAY).in other words, your typical day.
For someone in the twilight of their sunset years, it may be "bah".Bah.
As if we don't have a bunch of useless humans already?That is the paradox. Do humans become useless?
As if we don't have a bunch of useless humans already?
That's what war is for, if that isn't good enough, some engineered virus can kill some, but mostly what is needed is a bunch more tyrants who aren't too timid to kill 75% of their citizens. Eventually it will come to that.Watch that vid I posted. We can add another 25% of the population to the heap of "useless" in less than a generation. What are we to do with that much involuntary unemployment?
Outside of a Carrington event, this juggernaut is not going to stop.