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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by PeterZ » Sun Dec 07, 2014 7:22 pm | |
PeterZ
Posts: 6432
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Don,
EoC promissory notes can perform another very useful function. Those notes can establish a risk free interest rate. Notes backed by future gold/silver production are essentially risk free so long as no more notes are issued than gold can be produced. The benefit of a universally accepted risk free interest rate will be to standardize risk premiums for various securities. Standardized risk premiums makes it easier for smaller investors to understand and value securities and investments. That means more people will invest directly in promissory notes/bonds which leads to lower interest rates for non EoC issued securities. Best of both worlds here. Paper notes to establish a risk free rate and bullion to secure trust in the currency. |
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by n7axw » Sun Dec 07, 2014 7:36 pm | |
n7axw
Posts: 5997
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Hi PeterZ, Agreed. Thank you for the expanded commentary. Don When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by lyonheart » Tue Dec 09, 2014 9:05 am | |
lyonheart
Posts: 4853
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Hi HighJohn,
RFC has commented on a few of our previous attempts to fill in the gaps, like the lack of any mention of RCN escorts for any annual treasury fleets, however much of a simple courtesy they would have been, indicating the amounts sent to Zion from the island nations were more paper transactions than coins or bullion. Destiny's little escapade in AMF proves the Desnar attempt to send its CoGA payments by sea was the exception since Destiny wasn't expecting such an attempt, such shipments being unexpected like the subsidized pirates' encounter in BSRA. Inflation has been known on Safehold since Duchairn didn't have to explain the concept to Trynair, ie it has been experienced and seen from afar somewhere in their lifetimes, if not in the temple lands directly, which isn't impossible as various nations 'adjusted' the value of their coinage, including the amount of precious metal and the ratios of brass to silver and gold etc. Duchairn's references to increased numbers of 'clipped' and 'underweight' coins in the same conversation indicates the principle concept of inflation is very well known on Safehold, as demonstrated by RFC's post on the relative value of the respective national marks over the past 6 years. Coins do wear out over decades if not centuries, so replacement rates are important, but increases in the money supply are crucial to economic expansion, which has been happening all over Safehold for some decades, so figuring what the precious metal production rate has been of some interest. Apparently the Mohryah Lode potentially could easily outproduce Desnar's gold mines, if Cayleb cared about that. The ten year promissory notes being offered at 6% compound interest indicates some of the intended limits of the production, but perhaps more importantly those promissory notes can be traded and exchanged as an adjunct to the coins in circulation, to help the money supply expand given the potential explosion in production and productivity given the advent of steam engines and assembly lines. I suspect the church was and still is the largest creditor, and almost all international banks like the House of Qwentyn were and are far larger creditors than Howsmyn, however large his personal fortune. Then there's the CoC, which is spending far less than its nominal 20% double tithe, despite spending more on local problems than ever before. Suggestions of how the CoC is spending its vast income are very welcome here since its been years since I made some attempts at priorities and their allocated portions. I've previously suggested it has loaned the crown a considerable amount of that unspent wealth at very low interest rates, and were Maikel so inclined might have increased the money supply by depositing other considerable sums in banks it approves of so they can lend more, if they meet the CoC's stringent standards, to meet the boom all the innovation since 890 YoG has created. I imagine Underhill has borrowed all he could from the reputable banks as well, and having the wherewithal to begin paying his debts soon has been more than a vast relief, but giving him time to take a longer view of all the various aspects of the economy and the treasury's role. Will he pay his debts immediately in bullion? I doubt it, because it might be then dumped on the market creating the explosive inflation so feared, so it probably will be in treasury notes and fresh minted coins, perhaps on a pro-rated basis according to how much has been borrowed, allowing bankers to calculate the payoff rate, for their own planning and profit etc. Given the amount of gold and silver, I could see Charis actually increasing the amount of precious metal in its coins, at a time when everyone else is reducing theirs, to insure confidence remains high. of course the effect of that on the international exchange rates will be fascinating to watch. L
Last edited by lyonheart on Fri Dec 12, 2014 5:46 am, edited 1 time in total.
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by DDHv » Tue Dec 09, 2014 1:29 pm | |
DDHv
Posts: 494
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This one works very well in personal finances also. With personal finances it is also possible to build up a reserve of things you know will be needed: ie using summer to fill the pantry, etc. There should be some variation of this possible with Charis also, if just to even out the flow. Douglas Hvistendahl
Retired technical nerd Dumb mistakes are very irritating. Smart mistakes go on forever Unless you test your assumptions! |
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by EdThomas » Tue Dec 09, 2014 2:22 pm | |
EdThomas
Posts: 518
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Not sure if this is a dumb question but....
What effect, if any, will the world learning about the Mohriyah Lode have on the Empire and the rest of the world? My thought was Cayleb will be able to print as much silver-backed money (or issue notes?) as he needs because of the size of the Lode. This feels like not a good thing. Please be gentle. |
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by TN4994 » Tue Dec 09, 2014 2:31 pm | |
TN4994
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Silver dollars to finance the war? |
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by Graydon » Tue Dec 09, 2014 3:05 pm | |
Graydon
Posts: 245
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To a considerable extent, yeah. Money isn't a thing; money is what we do so we don't have to define a standard chicken. Use of specie is an easy way to avoid counterfeiting at low tech (it's hard to fake gold, at least until you can refine tungsten) so it starts getting mistaken for money but it isn't. Gold standards limit the money to amount of gold you've dug up. This is perfectly in line with Langhorne's plans because the gold standard makes it hard for an economy to expand; if your total money supply is set by the amount of gold, and you start getting better at something so the economy produces more value, the effect is to make an individual coin more valuable in real terms, because the total number of coins is fixed, and the economy as a whole just got more valuable. (You just swapped all your pre-Merlin galleons for proper ship-rigged flush-decked ships with diagonal planking; your haulage is greater and your trips are faster, but over the economy as a whole, there's still only the same number of gold coins.) An individual coin now has to represent more value; debts get larger. If you're trying to borrow to start a business, you can expect your debt to grow larger over time. This makes it harder to start a business the more the economy expands. Mining gold usually mostly takes care of population growth, but a big gold strike (California, South Africa...) can mess with things. (The British Empire fought the Boer War with such disproportionate force to retain control of those gold mines. With gold-backed currency and an expanding industrial economy, they really really needed those gold mines.) So Cayleb and Charleyan have an empire with a rapidly expanding economy; they're diffusing about eighty years of industrial development out in a decade. This is going to have the effect of driving up the value of a Charisian Mark, all right, but it's also going to be internally crippling if they can't increase their internal money supply. (Anybody taking out a loan finds it's increasingly expensive in real terms; makes it hard for the economy to grow. You can't exploit capital efficiently, because the sensible thing to do is sit on it; it's getting more valuable just sitting there, why would you risk it on some novel industrial scheme?) Charis can't use the real-world solutions -- fractional reserve banking, fiat currencies, and central bank lender-of-last-resort stability mechanisms -- because Langhorne carefully forbade them. What they can do, fortuitously, is add coinage metal from Silverlode Island to keep the money supply the same size as their expanding economy. They still have to make sure the economy grows enough to afford, in real terms, their military expenditures. (Having a money supply too large for the economy = inflation. Too small = deflation. It's easier to grow with some inflation, and that might help keep the Charisian Mark a little cheaper and help with exports.) Getting it just right is very difficult, but hopefully Owl has a couple late Federation economics textbooks on hand with very clear intro chapters about historical underpinnings. Oh, and remember that the Church has a monopoly on education; I expect the Church of Charis is investing heavily in better schools generally and technical universities specifically. |
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by Darman » Tue Dec 09, 2014 3:15 pm | |
Darman
Posts: 249
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That was what I was originally trying to get at. The British Royal Navy would begin planning for the next year's operations in the fall, asking Parliament for funds (that would be taken out of the as-yet-uncollected taxes) for the next year for X thousand men. Food supplies need to be purchased, processed (wheat milled into flour and then baked, pigs and cattle butchered then salted during the cooler winter months, peas harvested and dried, beer brewed and rum distilled, etc) and then packaged and shipped to the Royal Navy's victualing yards for in-processing and finally distribution to the fleet. However, the initial payments being made by the Navy are being made with promissory notes, promising to pay when funds become available. Of course no one knows exactly when that will be. |
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by ayg » Tue Dec 09, 2014 4:39 pm | |
ayg
Posts: 51
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Some of the CoC's extra money went to help purchasing the food sent to Siddarmark. I'm not sure how big a percentage of their total it was, but there is a comment about it early in MTaT. There's probably also programs to help widows and orphans created by the war.
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Re: Financing the navy | |
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by Highjohn » Tue Dec 09, 2014 9:20 pm | |
Highjohn
Posts: 221
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Lyonheart. Re-ceck your book. Here is the quote from Duchairn(Found on page 230 Midst Toil and Tribulation, Hard back).
"Form our perspective, though," the treasurer continued, "What matters is even without that sort of, ah questionable approach, were effectively putting money that doesn't exist into the economy, and everyone knows it. Put another way were about to see an explosive ... inflation, for want of a better word, in the cost of everything we buy because a temple mark is going to be worth less and,...." Notes: The questionable approach Duchairn was referring to was the lowing of the bullion content of newly minted coins(which would be a considerable amount, as old coins would need to be reminted). However the point of that quote was that first, the word inflation was new. At least used in that way. The second point was yes Duchairn did have to explain inflation. He does so in the next sentence. Also the explanation of exchange rates is not an explanation of inflation. The two are vary different concepts which describe different things. Also I would like to point out that your wrong about this
Re-check the book. There are mentions of the tithe needing to be sent by land this year. So they were obviously sending tithe in previous years. Sending being the operative word. |
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