Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Andrew Lainton — Consolidating Central Bank and Central Government Accounts – The Mark to Market Problem


Andrew Lainton responds to Neil Wilson's The Consolidated Government Sector.

Decisions, Decisions, Decisions
Consolidating Central Bank and Central Government Accounts – The Mark to Market Problem
Andrew Lainton

6 comments:

Darren said...

Might want to correct that link since they both go to the same place.

Tom Hickey said...

Thanks Senexx. Link fixed.

paul meli said...

I'm with Neil on this one...any central bank/Treasury arrangement is nothing more than a Rube-Golbergesque accounting construction that can always be made "solvent" by creating entries from thin air.

Banks are fully dependent on incomes generated by public spending in any case...and public spending has no functional limit.

Here's a model of the system:

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/33741/SB%20model%20wBanks.png

Where does the CB fit in?

Anonymous said...

Paul, where's that diagram from?

paul meli said...

"Paul, where's that diagram from?"

From my CAD program. The model is my view of the system.

It's the sectoral balances model with a bank circuit added.

Anonymous said...

I thought the concept of goodwill didn't apply very well to monopolies - if you have a monopoly then brand, reputation, other intangibles don't mean much. Other than political ability to maintain the monopoly (which is outside of accounting anyway).

So, why a central bank should have any goodwill in an accounting sense (yes, in a political sense), is beyond me.