Shotgunner51
RETIRED INTL MOD
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Dude, you probably are the one that is misleading the poster. Essentially, you are saying since China is the biggest creditor on earth, they do not have debt? LOL since when did having a surplus have anything to do with having debt?
My point being every country are in debt is actual debt. A basic of economic principal. To which the correct macroeconomic term for fiat currency are "Debt-Based Currency"
Fiat Currency | Fiat Planet
Credit theory of money - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://www.princeton.edu/~markus/research/papers/i_theory.pdf
It have been studied since early 1900s. By economist Alfred Mitchell-Innes. Which theorized that all currency is debt. While what you are talking about is the "Public Debt" and "Government Surplus". Which related to Accounting.
Your concept of debt is that if after your balanced your books, your asset is more than expense, then you are in credit (Means positive revenue) or if you have more expense than asset, then you are in debt, while in Economic theory, all fiat money are debts/credits (Depending on which way you are looking at)
As I explained in my post. Fiat Money is a paper that you use as tendered currency, and while the paper itself does not worth anything, the tender (or issuing authority) would have to vouch that your tender can exchange the face amount.
Say on one hand, you have a 100RMB note, on the other, an Apple which have a number 100 crafted on it.
Now, when you go out and try to spend that 100 RMB, you can use it to get 100RMB worth of goods and service. But if you bring your apple out and try to spend it, people will ask you to eat it, and at best, you can get another apple. Now, noted that the 100RMB which was printed on is worth "SIGNIFICANTLY" less than the apple, which a 100 RMB may actually cost 1 cents to prints, while the apple you are holding cost 3 or 4 RMB to buy.
Now, imagine this, you are holding a 100RMB notes, it only worth 100RMB because the bank have vouched it can let you exchange 100RMB worth of goods and service. Now what happened if the bank stop guarantee that? In theory, you are holding 99.99RMB debt (as in 99.99 RMB out of pocket yourselves). Because that is the value of the money, if the Central Bank of China stop guarantee that as legal tender.
Now, based on this, all money are debt, because it only worth that much because the bank said so. And unforntuately the world does not work on "Numerical Value system" Do you know what does that means?
Last year,the Chinese GDP reaches 11.38 trillions USD. Converting them to RMB would means Chines GDP is somewhere about 70 trillions RMB. My question is can you actually use them or spend them? NO (Capital N, Capital O). They exist on paper, as they are the value you add, subtract or balance, and while they are money, they aren't actually the same money you have in your wallet. That's when I go into a bank and ask them to show me 70 trillions worth of 100 RMB note, it cannot be done.Simply because Chinese hard currency does not have that much RMB in circulation. So, how do you actually guarantee the value that you have earn that much and convert them into hard currency so you can use it? Care to guess how??
Your central bank balance the need of currency by selling, buying and BORROWING from other country. So that they can continue to vouch for the value and you have 11.38 trillions GDP. If they failed to do so, that 11.38 trillions will not worth 11.38 trillions, as since they cannot voiuch for the value, they may as well have 11.38 trillions apple.
Just because your country have surplus, does not mean they did not borrow anything or have debts. I have a debit bank account, which have around 20,000 AUD in it, yet I have a credit card which I owe some 1,000 to commonwealth bank (I don't quite remember) I can both be having a surplus and having a debt. Is it so hard for you people to understand, I know this is Post Grad level Economics, but still....
Also, in case you don't know, if you have bothered to read the article, like you should before shooting it down, it said so that while the downgraded the outlook due to the investment environment, they did not downgrade the status (Which remain in AA) because the Chinese have enough surplus to finance a financial reform, the downgrade of outlook is due to the instability of Chinese financial market, that would require a reform. That means they do acknowledge while China in fact have debt, they are able to cover it (At least for now).
Before you call other misleading, Better bush up your own knowledge before opening your mouth and call for my ban. Otherwise it will make you look stupid.
Look at what you write:
- First equate MONEY SUPPLY = debt? No that's not it, it makes you look stupid.
- Bringing CURRENCY into this discussion, spinning it towards academic? Long, confusing, unrelated paragraphs trying to make the discussion complicated? Goal-pole shifting, laughable, stay on topic.
- When there is DEBT booked by a borrower, CREDIT is booked by a lender. They CO-EXIST
- There are different DEBT relations, examples (1) external speaking a nation versus foreigner, (2) internal banks lending to business, (3) government borrowing.
- ALL countries, I repeat, ALL have EXTERNAL LIABILITIES, and EXTERNAL ASSETS.
- Net International Investment Position (NIIP) is the EXTERNAL LIABILITIES less EXTERNAL ASSETS.
- If EXTERNAL ASSETS exceed EXTERNAL LIABILITIES, then the nation is CREDITOR NATION.
- If EXTERNAL LIABILITIESS exceed EXTERNAL ASSETS, then the nation is DEBTOR NATION
Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Statistics
Sixth Edition of the IMF's Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual (BPM6
Sixth Edition of the IMF's Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual (BPM6
Now you got the above OFFICIAL definition right, don't you? Next, results, see the official data. Read financial accounts from various central banks.
- At end 2015 Q2, Japan's international investment position was Yen +347.543 trillion
- At end 2015 Q3, Germany was Euro +1.4594 trillion
- At end 2015 Q3, China Mainland was USD +1.5399 trillion
- At end 2015 Q3, China Hong Kong was HKD +7.7904 trillion
- At end 2015 Q3, USA was USD -$7,269.8 billion. Yes, negative, and deepest in the world.
http://www.mof.go.jp/international_policy/reference/iip/201512a.pdf
http://www.bundesbank.de/Redaktion/...rmoegen_quartal.en.pdf?__blob=publicationFile
http://www.safe.gov.cn/
http://www.statistics.gov.hk/pub/B10400012015QQ03B0100.pdf
News Release: U.S. Net International Investment Position
http://www.bundesbank.de/Redaktion/...rmoegen_quartal.en.pdf?__blob=publicationFile
http://www.safe.gov.cn/
http://www.statistics.gov.hk/pub/B10400012015QQ03B0100.pdf
News Release: U.S. Net International Investment Position
See above? It's very simple:
- US is the world's largest DEBTOR NATION
- China (Mainland, HK, TW) is the world's largest CREDITOR NATION.
You better stop misleading, and stop confusing on a simple matter. Learn something from official sources before opening your mouth, otherwise it will make you look stupid.
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