Richard Werner: A Whistle-Stop Tour Of Modern Banking

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
  • Last week, host, Ross Ashcroft, spoke with Professor Richard Werner about how temporary QE has become a permanent problem.
    In this weeks episode, Professor Werner discusses a whole a range of banking issues including the Weimar Republic, central bank digital currencies, credit creation, the war on cash, crypto, gold, the date of the next crash and personal sovereignty.
    Read all about it here: renegadeinc.co...
    Read and download transcript here: renegadeinc.co...
    All full episodes also on renegadeinc.co...
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Komentáře • 54

  • @RogerLewisGuitarPlayer
    @RogerLewisGuitarPlayer Před 2 lety +15

    Always a pleasure to get Richard Werner's take on things. First-class as ever.

  • @yvubgv
    @yvubgv Před rokem +3

    Fantastic interview! Thanks, Renegade Inc. for providing such a valuable content.

  • @Dangling-Pointer
    @Dangling-Pointer Před 2 lety +4

    Very pleasant interviewer and interviewee!

  • @AnnoDomini97
    @AnnoDomini97 Před 2 lety +6

    Prof. Werner never disappoints. That was a lot of info in under 30 min.

  • @charlieshaw1500
    @charlieshaw1500 Před 2 lety +6

    What he said about only party members having cars is not true. There were long waiting lists for ordinary people but many ordinary folk had cars

  • @annakryzilinski4748
    @annakryzilinski4748 Před 2 lety +2

    If you have any fiat currency buy gold and silver as much as possible and prepare for financial political and social chaos unlike anything in human history.

  • @luisluis5306
    @luisluis5306 Před 2 lety +2

    9:40 I use cash when ever i can.

  • @mikehardwicke23
    @mikehardwicke23 Před 11 měsíci

    The positive correlation is known as Gibson's Paradox, recognised in the 19th(?) Century - not understood by Keynes and ignored ever since

  • @markmccormack1796
    @markmccormack1796 Před 2 lety +3

    Please. The rich pressure the CB's to print money. The rich cash out before the crash. Institute austerity for the 99% and wait for the next boom. The corps and Ulta rich are the modern version of the Ancien Régime.

  • @patbranigan6501
    @patbranigan6501 Před 2 lety +2

    credit and bitcoin are the same "money" based on nothing.

    • @nulinf
      @nulinf Před 2 lety

      Except credit can be created infinitely

  • @Anza_34832
    @Anza_34832 Před rokem

    @20:15 Herr Werner’s suspicions about the gold price being held artificially held low may well be true. In this case we’re in for a hellish surprise once people begin to uncover it!!

  • @jaymills1720
    @jaymills1720 Před 2 lety

    Anyone discussing hyperinflation needs to discuss the plumbing. They don’t. Weimar hyperinflation was due to holding debt denominated in foreign currency and being forced to print Deutschmarks with an dwindling capacity to produce. If you have a sovereign currency you’re not going to deal with that.

  • @m111ark
    @m111ark Před 2 lety +1

    How does one track bank credit creation for the purpose of acquiring assets? I guess when stocks crash.

  • @stanstreatfield3485
    @stanstreatfield3485 Před 2 lety

    Didn't know the freedom for private banking was referenced in the Magna Carta.

  • @sorinhornet208
    @sorinhornet208 Před 2 lety +2

    'We have to move to a county that is less restrictive '... Russia 🇷🇺 🤔?

  • @RussCR5187
    @RussCR5187 Před 2 lety +2

    So, is that my actionable takeaway from this video? Buy Bitcoin? Move to a different country?

    • @VIEWITIS
      @VIEWITIS Před 2 lety

      Open a small bank, have a front office and back office that cannot speak to each other about a loan, hire good loan officers who will kick the tires, hire good numbers guys to run the numbers separately. If front and back office independently agree, then and only then should you approve a loan. DO NOT LOAN FOR ASSET SPECULATION.

  • @m111ark
    @m111ark Před 2 lety

    How does the FED expand credit?

  • @bikingcopenhagen4068
    @bikingcopenhagen4068 Před 2 lety

    I would like to ask professor Werner, isn't it normal for small banks and firms to become medium and large eventually,because it's the normal process of development, everything kind of scales up? So how are you going to keep the small business small when the natural tendency is growth?

    • @VIEWITIS
      @VIEWITIS Před 2 lety +3

      He's covered this, I just can't find the timestamp in a lecture for you. The gist: more community banks must constantly be opened to fill those spots at the ground level, ensuring that lending continues to keep small firms competitive in their field. He points to Germany and the US, which have thousands of small community banks and high numbers of hidden champions.

    • @milire2668
      @milire2668 Před rokem +1

      @@VIEWITIS i know im quite late to tha party lol but can confirm, he spoke about it again (i think) in the valhalla interview with george n his former student whos name i cant recall rn

  • @cheninblanc8208
    @cheninblanc8208 Před 2 lety +1

    another good interview........

  • @alessandropecoraro9376

    Highly interessting when Richard is speaking.
    One topic would be nice to discuss if really the growth would stop in economic once credit creation stops and we only use exisiting value by realocating it.
    For me it means, there will be always people demanding food, houses, cars what ever.
    So, basicly the live will not stopp.
    Could it be that with credit creation we only over consum products and due to this is not driven by natural demand, we always will end in Boom and Bust cycles, as credit creation leads to wrong capital allocation. See whats happening today. Its a mission impossible to get a craftman for small works on bathroom and if you get one the quality is really bad. Credit creation is pushing people in this job and no demand can grow so fast for ever. The contraction will come and people get jobless.
    So, basicly I think a natural demand of products and services lead to a natural grow without overloading our earth massifly over consuming ressources.
    As you see its worth to discuss an economy natural driven without banks etc.
    I mean a common global payment system is just created and driven by undependent people making it ready for mass adoption.
    See Bitcoin and the layers created on top of this. This is the Internet of money.
    Would like to hear the way of Thinking about from Richard Müller

  • @bionicsix101
    @bionicsix101 Před 2 lety

    Top notch as usual.

  • @evanwilliamson3602
    @evanwilliamson3602 Před 2 lety

    I’m a Bitcoin fan (not other shit coins) and I think I’m the first person to say that BTC isn’t as “decentralised” as people think. And “not needing a middleman” is also false. What’s Coinbase? How do I buy BTC that’s regulated without my bank knowing? You can’t, which automatically ties in centralisation within the transaction. Granted, I can buy BTC without a middle man, but that’s not REGULATED.

  • @Anza_34832
    @Anza_34832 Před rokem

    @24:18 Concerning Werner’s chart, I’d preferred to see REAL GDP, not nominal GDP to be plotted against interest rates

  • @debralegorreta1375
    @debralegorreta1375 Před 2 lety +1

    typical self-serving spin
    the very notion of comparing Japan to the UK is ludicrous because ever since Basel III all member central banks belong to the same system . . . comparing two members is the equivalent of comparing the carburetor to the exhaust pipe in an internal combustion engine. . . makes no sense, especially because they work together.
    fact is, japan uses MMT to the benefit of all other central banks, so to suggest UK is ok because it no longer using MMT is a blatant lie.
    no. this report is too cherry and uplifting deliberating concealing the devastating storm the entire system is about to confront. . .
    notice there's no mention here of Basel III . . . that's the way these financial pundits want it: the less weknow about the Basel conspiracy, the better.

    • @VIEWITIS
      @VIEWITIS Před 2 lety

      Werner blasts Basel 3 all the time, and the ECB generally.

  • @Dee-dw8uo
    @Dee-dw8uo Před 2 lety +1

    Wow didn’t think Weber would get crypto totally wrong

  • @jaymills1720
    @jaymills1720 Před 2 lety

    He’s comparing climate change to soviet Russia? I think I may be out in this guy. The us had price controls and govt rules during wartime with excellent success. Why not compare to 1940/1950 US? This is veering purely into ideology and not finance.

  • @charlieshaw1500
    @charlieshaw1500 Před 2 lety

    Thats not stalinist. Its leninist.

  • @ranban282
    @ranban282 Před 2 lety

    I have a lot of respect for Werner, but stopped listening after the fake news about India's demonetization

  • @bundleofperceptions1397
    @bundleofperceptions1397 Před 2 lety +4

    As brilliant has Prof. Werner seems to be, he still seems to believe that infinite growth in a finite system is possible. Not only is it not possible, it's also environmentally unsustainable. Economists! . . . . . am I right?

    • @bikingcopenhagen4068
      @bikingcopenhagen4068 Před 2 lety

      And where do you get the picture of what is environmentally sustainable, what are the criteria? Let me see, the Club of Rome, the global warming? The need of reducing human population? How can't environmentalists see that this is an eugenicist agenda? Who tells it's a finite system?

    • @annakryzilinski4748
      @annakryzilinski4748 Před 2 lety +1

      You are correct

    • @VIEWITIS
      @VIEWITIS Před 2 lety

      @@annakryzilinski4748 No, Werner is correct. It's a very simple, reasonable solution being presented here. Small decentralized banks kick the tires of their debtors and lend to them accordingly. Big banks don't kick the tires and instead speculate with your pension on the asset market.

    • @thebillgates
      @thebillgates Před 2 lety

      Economic Growth does not have to mean using up our resources. Let‘s take a very plain example: does a massage service or a sports coach or an arts teacher use up resources? Not really or at least not a lot. Yet all these vocations have emerged in the last 100 years, giving people a job and thus creating economic growth.
      If we found a way to recycle all materials we use up and thus close the circle again, we could still have economic growth by innovation: give away your old iphone, its materials get fully recycled and get a new iphone with better technology in it.
      Our resources are finite, but our economy can be infitely growing.
      And even population growth mustn‘t be a problem: we can go and expand into the galaxy and inhabitate new planets.
      Only people with bad intentions tell you that you mustn‘t grow, that you mustn‘t get rich but rather stay poor, etc. it‘s a lie.

  • @olubunmiolumuyiwa
    @olubunmiolumuyiwa Před 2 lety

    Turns out that Austrian Economics was right once again. They're the only school of thought that doesn't think artificially lowering interest rates means higher growth and etc. They always taught that is was a reflection of the resources available in the economy that would be a result of saving or lack thereof.
    High amount of people saving and lower spending -> higher interst rates -> long term investments for things such as schools and manufacturing. High amounts of spending and and low saving -> Lower interst rates ->New shorter term investments in shops.

  • @fruitbat2714
    @fruitbat2714 Před 2 lety

    Grrr… If he says Stalinist once more.🤬🤬

  • @nubosite
    @nubosite Před 2 lety

    Love Prof Richie when he’s talking economics, but don’t really know why he sometimes veers into medical and political areas where he’s Not as knowledgable

    • @naynay1139
      @naynay1139 Před 11 měsíci

      Because central bank level its entirely political