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Don't the banks have to hold a reserve amount of cash that isnt available for distribution/investment/purchasing, in the events of sudden financial collapse?
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Don't the banks have to hold a reserve amount of cash that isnt available for distribution/investment/purchasing, in the events of sudden financial collapse?
Thankyou for your input sb4b.
However, you are only answering the surface of my questions. Yes, the recent rate cut was to stimulate growth in a lagging economy. I get the basics.
But what still hasn't been answered are the more fundamental questions I posed in the OP, along the lines of who controls the money in circulation in this country, and how do they do it.
Are you referring to the RBA using Monetary Policy and DMO to control the total amount of money in circulation (M3)?
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Well that is the way the RBA controls the amout of money in circulation.
*facepalm*
Please elaborate.
The RBA buys/sells 2nd hand commonwealth government securities (CGS) with banks. By buying CGS, the RBA puts money into Banks exchange settlement accounts (ESA), thus increasing the amount of money in circulation. This also reduces the demand for money, as there is an excess of borrowable funds, making borrowing money easier.
Selling does the opposite obviously
This is also how they reduce Interest rates.
Same process with Federal Reserve in the US.
These bonds are considered high value because they government can never default on repayments, as they have the power to raise taxes to pay them.
Although I think the Chinese have purchased large swathes of US securities so lots of US debt is in Chinese hands
True.But technically they're still not guaranteed.
Yep, although from my understanding the US is China's major market for their exports so I doubt they'd have any wish to send the US bankrupt.Like you hinted at, if foreign debtors were to call in large sums of money, and our dollar was falling, you could find yourself in trouble.
Yep, although from my understanding the US is China's major market for their exports so I doubt they'd have any wish to send the US bankrupt.
I have no idea what fd just said (though I assume he's gloating over the one thing Iw as wrong about, which I thought I would be wrong about when I posted) as I have him on ignore.
I was facepalming because he's an idiot, who is desperately trying to save face because he won't admit he's embarrassed by the idiocy of his own thread.
Just, let, it.... go.
The RBA buys/sells 2nd hand commonwealth government securities (CGS) with banks. By buying CGS, the RBA puts money into Banks exchange settlement accounts (ESA), thus increasing the amount of money in circulation. This also reduces the demand for money, as there is an excess of borrowable funds, making borrowing money easier.
Selling does the opposite obviously
This is also how they reduce Interest rates.
You seem to be one of a very few around here who know what they are talking about.
Do you have any links to useful online resources for learning more?
If you want to learn about montary policy in Australia, why not go to the RBA's website since the RBA handles monetary policy? E.g. http://www.rba.gov.au/monetarypolicy/about_monetary_policy.htmlDo you have any links to useful online resources for learning more?
Same process with Federal Reserve in the US.
These bonds are considered high value because they government can never default on repayments, as they have the power to raise taxes to pay them.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/27/b...-many-now-think-inflation-helps.html?hp&_r=1&The federal government expects inflation to ease the burden of its debts. Yet by one measure, inflation rose at an annual pace of 1.2 percent in August, just above the lowest pace on record.
“Weighed against the political, social and economic risks of continued slow growth after a once-in-a-century financial crisis, a sustained burst of moderate inflation is not something to worry about,” Kenneth S. Rogoff, a Harvard economist, wrote recently. “It should be embraced.”
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/bus...-property-market/story-fn9656lz-1226747147870The most recent figures available from the Foreign Investment Review Board show Chinese property investment during the 2011-2012 financial year was worth $4.2 billion, with China the biggest foreign investor in the domestic property market, behind the US ($8.16bn) and Singapore ($5.7bn). The figures for the most recent financial year are to be published by the end of December.
http://www.news.com.au/realestate/c...before-next-boom/story-fncq3era-1226704103879Colliers International's managing director of residential property in Australia, Peter Chittenden, yesterday said Asian buyers were purchasing 60 per cent of units being sold off-the-plan in big developments.
http://www.smh.com.au/business/prop...rd-rate-says-john-mcgrath-20130913-2tocn.htmlAs much as 80 per cent of homes in parts of Sydney are being sold to Chinese buyers, said chief executive John McGrath.