Quote from Ed Breen:
Traitor, the Fed creates base money by recording a liability entry on its balance sheet, called "Dollars." The 'Dollar' is the non interest bearing demand credit of the United States. It is a debt instrument, the money is the liability of the Federal Reserve. It says right on the Dollar Bill, "Federal Reserve Note." Dollars are debt...that is not secured...it is an unsecured promisory note backed by "the full faith and credit of the United States.' The dollar is one of the continuum of debt instruments issued by the United States that viewed collectively make up the yield curve of United States credit instrument...Dollar is at Zero...rate used to go up materially as term went out...now more symbolically.
If you can wrap your mind around that fact that the Dollar is the debt of the U.S. Government that we use as money, lets go back to the Fed creating 'money.'
As stated, the Fed enters a liability on its balance sheet for Dollars, this is a key stroke event. The Fed then transfers that liability to the Treasury or other holders of Treasury debt, via primary dealers, in exchange for Treasury Bills, Notes, and or Bonds of longer maturity. The Treasury or the holders of Treasury Debt (Banks and Financial Institutions mostly), recieve the 'dollars' as an asset on thier balance sheets in exchange for the Treasury Debt (In the case of Treausry itself, it enters its debt as a liability of course...in a simple exchange the Fed created a liability and transfers it to Treasury in exchange for an asset and the Treasury creates a liabilty called a Treasury securuity and transfers it to the Fed as an asset.
In any case the Fed trades non interest bearing liabilities for interst bearing assets at an increasing spread as it manages its portfolio out the yeild curve. Banks, Financial Institutions sell or refrain from buying (becasue Fed buys direct at auction) Treasury debt at a higher yield in exchange for dollar assets at a zero yield.
Because there is insufficient demand for private debt the banks end up depositing the dollars acquired in their reserve accounts at the Fed. The 'money' that the Fed creates, the base money, does not really leave the Fed or the Government Banking system. What happens is that interest on government paper (and now government agency paper) that was held privately is being held by the Fed...so the income shifts from the private financial sector to the Fed...the Fed then takes the income and returns in to Treasury
....Now you tell me how much 'money' is being created and who is being benifitted.
None of this 'new' money is going into private credit formation. There will be no serious inflation until it does. Make no mistake, the Fed has been trying to push this money into private credit formation but they have not been successful. Thier own studies show that the supply of money alone does not increase bank credit or general prices and that the demand for money is created on the fiscal side, not the monetary supply side.
I know that seems hard to accept becuase you have been sold the idea that the quantity of base money determined the value of base money and that the value of base money is what drives inflation. However, the Quantity Theory of Money that was created in the 17th centuary when money was collateralzed by Gold does not function with regard to base money now that the base money is 'fiat,' uncollateralized, unsecured. Money only has value so long as the aggregate assets available to the sovereign to make good on the promise to pay are perceived to produce income sufficient to continue to pay the sovereign debts.