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  • Good morning Hank, it's Friday!

  • Good morning Hank, it's Friday you know in my hug bucket? Greece.

  • every time I see Greece just wanna give it a big ol' hug. I don't, however wanna give

  • them a 150 billion euro and therein lies a problem.

  • Okay, so I wanna to talk about sovereign debt today, but just to establish at the

  • outset that this is not a particularly political problem here the Chart of the

  • gross federal debt, by president as a percentage of GDP.

  • As you will notice, the fluctuations have nothing to do with whether the president

  • is blue or red. The same is true in other developed countries as well.

  • Okay so Hank, to begin let me tell you one of the great rules of economics. If you are

  • rich,

  • you have to be a idiot not to stay rich and if you are poor you have to be

  • really smart to get rich.

  • This is true for individuals but also true for countries. Fancy Pants countries

  • with Fancy Pants currencies have all kinds of advantages over developing countries,

  • including that we are able to borrow money cheaply.

  • In fact, because the Fancy Pants countries can borrow money so cheaply it actually

  • often makes sense to run a deficit.

  • And the reason for this is that in the long term our economy can grow faster

  • than the cheap cheap debt were requiring to pay for our economy to grow.

  • So that is not inherently bad for nations. The famous example of this is

  • that in 1945 the United States had a debt that was more than a hundred percent of it's

  • GDP.

  • And our deficit was more than twenty percent of our GDP and that level with

  • debt

  • immediately preceded the largest expansion of our economy in history. Also

  • the largest expansion of our waistlines in history.

  • Yes that's funny, we did get fat. So debt is not bad,

  • but debt that you can't repay is

  • very bad. The trick of Fancy Pants countries being able to borrow money

  • cheaply has always been that the market assumes that fancy pants countries are

  • basically

  • guaranteed to pay you back. And when I say the market assumes I mean the market

  • iassumed until two months ago.

  • When it realized that Greece fancy pants country with a fancy pants currency

  • maybe can't pay back its debts. What's interesting is that Greece is probably

  • technically in a better economic position that America was back in

  • 1945,

  • but for a variety of reasons, some of them very legitimate the market is so that

  • Greece won't be able to pay back its debt, which in turn has led to new debt

  • being much more expensive, which has in turn made it completely impossible for

  • Greece to

  • ever pay its debt. You see, Hank, it's a circle, and its vicious.

  • That's where they got the term.This raises the possibility that fancy pants countries

  • with fancy pants currencies might not pay back the money we loan them,

  • which will probably raise interest rates for a lot of fancy pants countries,

  • which could lead via the vicious circle to more defaults, higher interest rates,

  • more defaults,

  • higher interest rates, I could go on like this forever. Which will be very bad, like

  • we would yearn for the days of 10 percent unemployment. All of which is complicated by

  • the fact we're coming out of a worldwide recession in the total economic output

  • in the world is smaller.

  • So there's less money coming in taxes but governments still need to spend

  • approximately the same amount of money

  • and for everybody that says the problem is wasteful government spending we aren't even close to a

  • a balanced budget. I mean the United States would have to eliminate both its two

  • biggest expenses, Social Security and Defense,

  • in order to even come close to balancing the budget. The only other way to shrink

  • the deficit would be raised taxes which is not generally seen as a good idea

  • during recession. So the problem with sovereign debt maybe not being as cheap

  • as it once was,

  • isn't the fault of any one political ideology, it's kinda everybody's fault.

  • So basically Hank, I don't want to alarm you, but I do think we should all buy

  • unicorn

  • pinatas and hide our valuables in them. Actually Hank the unicorn strategy

  • won't work because we have to keep loaning each other money,

  • and we have to figure out a way to loan confidently, like we did back in 1945.

  • That's where the EU the IMF are working so hard try to nail down a bailout plan

  • for Greece.

  • And if fancy pants countries can't continue to convince us that our money is as safe with

  • them as it is inside of a unicorn pinata they will lose the cheap money

  • privilege they have enjoyed for centuries.

  • And history tells us that once a stupid rich man gets poor,

  • he doesn't usually get rich again, unless he is Donald Trump.

  • Hank, I'll see you on Monday.

  • Hank, I told you I'd see you on Monday, that's your signal to stop watching but nerdfighters there is still

  • time to participate in our secret project click here for more info.

  • Here, I made it a heart for you. Click.

Good morning Hank, it's Friday!

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