As of March 5th, they have $880 BILLION dollars of assets on their balance sheet to defend the U.S. banking system with. Should be interesting to see how this all plays out.
As of March 5th, they have $880 BILLION dollars of assets on their balance sheet to defend the U.S. banking system with. Should be interesting to see how this all plays out.
As of March 5th, they have $880 BILLION dollars of assets on their balance sheet to defend the U.S. banking system with. Should be interesting to see how this all plays out.
Central Banks can't go bankrupt.
They can print all the money they want.
They don't even need paper or presses, which could be rate limiting factors.
Most money is printed electronically.
Historically, most defaults in the world have been actually caused by political government revenge on banks (often leftist governments targeting rightist opposition).
Central banks publish profit figures that are invariably well below the amounts implied by calculations of their seigniorage revenue. Most of the difference is due to the impairment of central bank balance sheets by the acquisition of substandard assets and of liabilities not matched by assets of equal value. In the limit, a central bank can go bust when it has acquired liabilities of greater market value than the present value of its seigniorage revenue calculated for any steady-state inflation rate. An insolvent central bank can continue to service its liabilities only through accelerating inflation. Copyright 1992 by Blackwell Publishers Ltd and The Victoria University of Manchester