In part one of this three part series, we consider why a country that issues debt in its own currency can't default unless it chooses to. We also explore how central banks can control interest rates on the national debt. We also consider whether it is possible for government borrowing to crowd out the private sector.
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Show Notes
Money In The Modern Economy: An Introduction – Bank of England – Q1 2014
Money Creation In The Modern Economy – Bank of England – Q1 2014
Congressional Budget Office 2017 Long-term Budget Outlook
Going for Broke: Deficits, Debt, and the Entitlement Crisis – Michael D. Tanner
Bernanke’s Paradox: Can He Reconcile His Position on the Federal Budget with His Recent Charge to Prevent Deflation? – Pavlina R. Tcherneva – Levy Institute (includes quotes referenced in episode by Ben Bernanke and Michael Woodford
New Framework for Strengthening Monetary Easing: “Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing with Yield Curve Control” – Bank of Japan
Japan’s Debt Burden Is Quietly Falling the Most in the World – Bloomberg
The Bone Clocks – David Mitchell
Venezuela Is Starving – Juan Forero – Wall Street Journal
Curse or Blessing? How Institutions Determine Success in Resource-Rich Economies – Cato Institute
Forget Taxes, Warren Buffett Says. The Real Problem Is Health Care. – New York Times
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