Aggers wrote:I am puzzled. Where do all these countries borrow money from - Mars or Venus ?
(I am being serious.) Shouldn't we be told?
They sell Bonds. Bonds are "promissory notes" on which they pay interest. IN America they call these Treasury Bills or T bills. In short it is another form of money printing. Because the interest on the T bills they pay is paid by increasing the money supply or digitally printing money. When they buy the bonds back, they do so with more printed money.
So, when they talk about borrowing money, they talk about selling "script" which they pay interest on and buy back some time in the future. Sort of like lots of small mortgages for the government.
The goal is to sell high (current rate) and buy low (pay back later after inflation).
This is what got Greece and the PIIGS. They kept on borrowing as if they were running 8%-10% inflation. When it came time to pay back the bonds, they could not because they had only run 1%-2% inflation. So their days of borrowing at face value today and paying back 10%-12% in real terms 10 years later, were long over.
Of course if we carried on with 1% inflation for the next 100 years everyone would adjust and they would stop borrowing more than they could afford to pay back.
If you have been following the bond markets, you would have seen Osborne created "perpetual bonds" or notes on which he pays interest at the going rate, forever, but never pays back the principal. Thus simply pushing debt onto future generations who have the choice to either keep paying the interest or pay it back. Of course even if we run 2% inflation for 50 years the sum would be so small that we could probably pay it back off the sugar tax.... But that's a whole other story...