Wealth generated through debt is costing us time. It's borrowed time. It's borrowed wealth.
— Tom Luongo (#YouVilEatZeBugz) (@TFL1728) July 27, 2022
10:40. Haven't had real GDP for 13
years because they have to print $14 of $28's worth of debt to get a $1's worth
of GDP growth. That's not growth. That's$27's worth of
loss.
11:20. GDP growth based on government
debt is not growth. Because remember, GDP is Gross National Spending.
It's not Gross National Product. That's a BS term too. That's also
another one of these euphemisms for horse****. It's just gross national
spending. We roughly total how much money we spend and say we outputted
that much. That's not the truth when government spending is $.25 on every
dollar we spend . . . and the government is running a massive budget deficit.
It's not growth; it's just not. Real growth comes from savings and the
multiplication of win-win transactions in the open market. Real wealth
comes from the saving of time through the application of individuals'
comparative advantage, individuals' or firms' comparative advantage. I'm
better at making shoes, and you're better at making pottery. We trade.
I save a couple of hours making you shoes, and you save me a couple of hours
making me some dinner plates. Wealth is a measure of stored time.
Wealth generated through debt is costing us time. It's borrowed
time. It's borrowed wealth.
13:15. GDP is just spending.
That's all that it is but it says nothing about the quality of the
spending. If we spend the money on Ukrainian hookers and bullets . . .
does that constitute growth? What happens when we run out of debt that we
can sell to spend on Ukrainian hookers and bullets? And all the people
involved in the supply chain to produce to keep the Ukrainian hookers and
bullet makers in business? What happens to them when we run out of the
ability to issue debt. It's called mal-investment. And when the
money has been badly invested we wind up in a boom in terms of GDP growth that
is unsustainable, it's built on debt, it's built on the mispricing of risk,
it's built on interest rates being wrong. It alters the structure of
production across the entire economy. It overproduces bullets and
Ukrainian hookers as opposed to roads and food, like things that people
actually want. When you alter the structure of production like that
eventually you run out of time. You run out of actual resources that are
actually available. The prices of the resources that are available end up
going up.