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Vertical money • Gov’t forces us to pay taxes; we must accept money or go to jail • Our economic production backs money supply Horizontal Money & Industrial Capitalism  What if there’s a great lending opportunity, and bank has already lent 19$?  Where do i (interest) and p (profit) come from?  More loans or more vertical money required. ECONOMIC GROWTH  What if p<i?  Procyclical monetary system (positive feedback loops)  Inherently unstable Conventional Investment Theory  Buy an asset if interest payments ≤ revenue from asset: What do people invest in (USA)?  ~$14 trillion in mortgages  Record margin debt poses risk for bull market  “The amount of money investors borrowed from Wall Street brokers to buy stocks rose for a seventh straight month in January to a record $451.3 billion”  The repurchase revolution  Companies have been gobbling up their own shares at an exceptional rate. There are good reasons to worry about this  Since interest paid on debt is tax-deductible, whereas interest earned on cash is taxable, by increasing its net debt to finance buy-backs or dividends, a firm cuts its tax bill.  Most money is borrowed to buy existing assets, not to create new wealth Interest Bearing Debt in US Financial Capitalism & Asset Inflation Current System: Financial Capitalism & Asset Inflation Current System: Financial Capitalism & Asset Inflation  HEADLINE: Despite Drop in Commodity Prices, Farmland Values Rise  Rising asset prices  Most loans for mortgages, stocks, other assets  Drains money from real economy  Companies buying back stocks What determines asset prices?  P = asset price (e.g. land), R = income stream (e.g. rent), r = opportunity cost of money (e.g. interest rate)  t= annual tax on asset (e.g. land tax) What determines asset prices?  Asset prices also increase w/ expected future value of asset E(Pt+1), decrease w/capital gains tax tcg.  When asset prices are increasing, entire revenue stream can be used to pay interest  Financial sector becomes new rentier sector  CREDIT AVAILABILITY IS KEY!  Expected future price increase, driven by speculative demand in positive feedback loop  NYT Headlines: Welcome to the Everything Boom, or Maybe the Everything Bubble  “Around the world, nearly every asset class is expensive by historical standards.” Interest Bearing Debt in US Growth and Inequality or Collapse  Debt is 360% of GDP and growing faster than GDP  Interest on total debt is likely to be 15% of GDP. Direct transfer to lenders Credit market debt, net of gov’t Factors promoting speculation  Inelastic supply  Supply increases little in response to price (land, fossil fuels, food, minerals, etc.)  Small increase in demand = large increase in price Oil production and oil prices from 2003 to 2010. Oil prices more than tripled between January, 2005 and July, 2008, while total production increased by less than 3%. Factors promoting speculation  Inelastic demand  Demand decreases little in response to price (essential and non-substitutable resources: fossil fuels, food, land, minerals, etc.)  Small decrease in supply = large increase in price Factors promoting speculation  Large pools of capital seeking higher returns (inequality)  “Global FX volume reaches $5.3 trillion a day in 2013 – BIS”  ALL THESE FACTORS CONVERGE IN A FULL AND UNEQUAL PLANET Current System: Financial Capitalism & Asset Inflation  Bubble busts, banks capture assets, stop issuing new money  Industrial economy must also collapse Working group projects  Hypothesis: Assets are owned by wealthiest individuals; asset price inflation main cause of wealth inequality.  Use Picketty’s time series on wealth inequality, estimate coefficients Working group projects  Hypothesis: Much of economic growth in recent years is actually asset price inflation  Build model of economy with fixed productive capital (land and built capital) and fixed output; show how asset price inflation can lead to increased GDP, even with no increase in real output  Subtract asset price inflation from GDP, estimate correlation between energy use and GDP Rethinking taxation  Not required for government revenue  Required to:     reduce resource use back dollar achieve desirable income distribution adjust aggregate demand, reduce money supply Fiscal Policy  Expenditures  Government can target money to address unemployment, misery, poverty; provide public goods; restore natural capital  Taxation  Tax rent, natural resource extraction, waste emissions  Dramatic income tax increases, asymptotically approaching 100%  How much residual is enough for rich?  $5,000,000=99.9% tax rate  $1,000,000= 99.98% rate  Relative wealth Marginal tax rates and income share for top 0.1%