kzt wrote:Silverwall wrote:Or more simply the government declares the insurers financiers "to big to fail" and write them a cheque on the national debt. They did it here in NZ when some of the insurance companies were going bankrupt because of the Christchurch earthquake claims.
As pointed out above and in real life this is the sort of event for which government backing is assumed/required to avoid total financial meltdowns. It also cushions the blow for the average man in the street who is looking to government to soften random acts of misfortune.
Today the US total government debt is $19,360,176,741,617.54
So we'll say $19 trillion.
The US GDP is generally said to be $17.42 Trillion.
If the US government tomorrow decided to issue an additional $68 trillion is bonds to cover an emergency what would the effect be?
You now have a national debt of $85 trillion. The entire US tax revenue (local, state and federal) is estimated to be $6.45 trillion. This is 600 billion less than the US government spends. So the deficit slowly rises and the rating of US government bonds slowly goes down. A 68 trillion increase will not result in a slow drop in rating, it will be a freefall to toilet paper land.
There is no possible way you can ever pay that off and nobody will buy bonds for that because nobody with that kind of money is that dumb. Essentially the only option to do this is the government printing huge amounts of money. You know what an economist calls the effect of a government printing huge amounts of money?
Hyperinflation.
They are in a war for survival of their nation do you think being able to pay off that debt is going to be a worry? Instead of thinking how bad things are try to think of all the ways that a government would try and do to keep things going?
You are also forgetting how long people live waiting a century for a bond to mature would be consider a basic long term investment. You will always find people who would be willing to buy high risk long term bonds.
What is the GDP of Star empire of Manticore? If Klaus Hauptman can be worth trillions think of the scale of an economy that can produce that.