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  1. I have never heard of “sovereign credit”. That’s OK, but can we be sure that the Greens and Te Pati Maori have heard of it, let alone adopt it?

  2. Any blog that says the opposition comes from a grouping including TPM must be taken with a grain of salt as they may have vanished by the next election.

      1. Having been in hospitality for many years I found many great chefs 2ho are not good at business and restaurants are constantly opening and closing as trends change . No one I’d disputing times are hard but economy is always in flux and will improve in time.

        1. The tired old dogma of “not good at business and restaurants are constantly opening and closing as trends change” gets trotted out every single time despite overwhelming evidence that the this government is responsible for the economy tanking. And by the way record numbers of businesses are closing, that’s not a trend pal. Oh and next time you have a fire at your house Trev, don’t call the fire brigade as they are in a “flux” state right now unless of course Trev you’ve been in the fires service for many years?

          https://www.nzherald.co.nz/rotorua-daily-post/news/bay-of-plenty-firefighters-strike-goes-ahead-fenz-warns-of-delays-in-111-responses/T4QJKKY6UVE77EALMAOVF7WZMM/

          Add in teachers striking and health workers striking and you will find there is a fucking trend all right!

  3. The only growth in NZ IS UNEMPLOYMENT ,UNDER EMPLOYMENT ,BUSINSESSES CLOSING AND POVERTY ALONG WITH HOMELESSNESS .What a record to be proud of as a country .

  4. While it was a sensible idea in the 1930s, now we have the professional management class, who will take 40% of any spending for doing very little, so unless a new efficient system is introduced, any sovereign credit will just be used to increase the inequality in society.

  5. Yes! But don’t underestimate the blowback from the bond market. It’s possible to execute what you’re suggesting but I don’t think we have sufficient intellectual horsepower in treasury and strength in our politicians to navigate this. Chances are more likely this blows up in our faces rather badly.

    The time to do this was in covid when the markets were very distracted – the “eye of Sauron” will be very much focused on NZ this time and I don’t doubt we’ll be made an example of.

  6. Excellent article and gets to the dark heart of modern fiat currency based economies. The bond market does not dictate what a government can ‘borrow’ or spend – it is a construct or convention for setting the OCR and controlling the money supply – the amount of money in circulation. Bonds are viewed as a safe harbor benchmark asset by investors – bonds are a savings service provided to savers by the government.
    All government spending happens through the creation of reserves at commercial banks by the RBNZ when instructed by Treasury to do so. These reserves are used to create deposits in the bank accounts of the private sector – teachers, doctors, nurses, police salaries, pensions, welfare payments, contractor payments etc.
    All of these payments happen regardless of the amount of tax revenue or bond purchases – these come after the government has put new money into circulation through spending.
    The idea that the government taxes and ‘borrows’ money to pay for spending is not what happens in the real world. If you think about – how did the government get money for the GFC and COVID when the private sector had collapsed? The money the government spends cannot come from the collapsing private sector – obviously. The government meets its commitments regardless of it’s income – it spends through the business cycle using it’s own overdraft – infinite reserves – at the RBNZ.

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