>>8402
This entire discussion about 3 months ago would have went completely over my head. But because I am autistic and like repeating myself, I've become at the very least three times as educated on the subject that is being discussed here. I'd just like to first of all say that there is no such thing as ''money printing''. It literally does not even exist. There's something central banks can do which commonly gets confused with money printing that has to do with a central bank buying government bonds through normal banks that people sometimes confuse with ''money printing'' (which does not exist, by the way) that injects liquidity into the economy. It increases the reserves of banks, and what people misunderstand is that once a central bank buys these government bonds from different financial institutions, it's not actually circulating within the economy. So, with that said, there is a type of injection of reserves of banks which causes the price of specific assets to inflate such as stocks and real estate, but generally, aside from that, the money does not actually circulate in the economy. The additional reserves made are digital money, and for the most part, these reserves are not even printed into actual money, and does not actually cause inflation due to this. The only thing that happens once this central bank decides to buy government bonds is that the demand for these same bonds increase, and as they are subject to supply and demand as with just about any other product that exists in a market, government bonds are then sold at higher prices and lower yields due to the demand for it. This is still something I am not a pro in, but I hope it made enough sense to you guys as it did for me typing it. For the record, this concept is known among pros as ''quantitative easing'', but don't get too caught up in jargons, it is essentially meaningless.