nicko31
Well-known member
This seems…an odd fight to pick…
[tweet]1578456156778872832[/tweet]
She really will need WW3 to save her at this rate
This seems…an odd fight to pick…
[tweet]1578456156778872832[/tweet]
It’s obviously a premeditated U-Turn to suggest that they are still ‘listening’ and that they ‘get-it’.
Just look up Gilts. Then look up National debt, and Budget defecit and if you really want to humiliate go and ask an eminent economist.
Google Modern Monetary Theory.
Google Modern Monetary Theory.
If that is really the sum total of your response to my request for supporting evidence, then I'm afraid a wave of your hands in the general direction of an economic theory you favour, doesn't cut it.
I'm not [MENTION=38012]BenGarfield[/MENTION], the poster you asked for evidence.
Just look up Gilts. Then look up National debt, and Budget defecit and if you really want to humiliate go and ask an eminent economist.
I know you're not [MENTION=38012]BenGarfield[/MENTION]. I'm addressing you.
.. and they pointed you to a concise summary of the theories. I'm not sure what the problem is.
I know what guilts are, of couse. I dont need to look anything up.They are a type of savings account run by the government to give rich people, private pension funds etc an income. Like taxation, the government does not need them to finance its spending. They are also used as a tool for monetary policy. They could probably be abolished altogether.
If you think that the government needs our money in the form of guilts, tax etc to fund its spending - where do you think we get the money to start with if not from the government. You do know its illegal to print your own money dont you?
The problem is, that my request for supporting evidence, remains unanswered.
[MENTION=38012]BenGarfield[/MENTION] claimed that many eminent economists and others would agree with his analysis, and indeed were waiting for an explanation why they were mistaken. I asked for a list of those eminent economists, and unsurprisingly, I'm still waiting.
To reiterate, a general wave of the hands at some economic theory, of which there are many (translated, that means 'go and find it yourself') really doesn't cut it.
Have you heard of evidence-based analysis? If you make a claim like 'many eminent economists would agree with my analysis', and then fail to provide the name of one single eminent economist who may or may not agree with your analysis, what conclusions should the audience make?
I know what guilts are, of couse. I dont need to look anything up.They are a type of savings account run by the government to give rich people, private pension funds etc an income. Like taxation, the government does not need them to finance its spending. They are also used as a tool for monetary policy. They could probably be abolished altogether.
If you think that the government needs our money in the form of guilts, tax etc to fund its spending - where do you think we get the money to start with if not from the government. You do know its illegal to print your own money dont you?
I think you are best placed unpicking the theories rather than picking fights with people who merely pointed you to them,
The problem is, that my request for supporting evidence, remains unanswered.
[MENTION=38012]BenGarfield[/MENTION] claimed that many eminent economists and others would agree with his analysis, and indeed were waiting for an explanation why they were mistaken. I asked for a list of those eminent economists, and unsurprisingly, I'm still waiting.
To reiterate, a general wave of the hands at some economic theory, of which there are many (translated, that means 'go and find it yourself') really doesn't cut it.
Have you heard of evidence-based analysis? If you make a claim like 'many eminent economists would agree with my analysis', and then fail to provide the name of one single eminent economist who may or may not agree with your analysis, what conclusions should the audience make?
You misunderstand my motive. I'm not picking fights at all.
Instead, I'm raising the bar...
When someone posts what I consider to be a wild claim (e.g. 'many eminent economists would agree with me'), the theory can be unpicked later.
Before that happens, it is proper, desirable and reasonable to expect the protagonist to provide a modicum of evidence to support his claim.
ok, covered £8bn. now, what about the other 52bn?