A major kind of inflation that the government can impose on its bondholders is through a lower exchange rate. A high proportion of gilts are owned by foreigners who will sell their bond holdings at a loss to avoid even worse when translated into their own currency.
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Government debts are more than just Gilts. The primary holders of Gilts are UK banks (capital), UK pensioners (annuitants and pension funds), and insurance companies. What do you think the effect of inflation has on those 'owners'?
What about the other debts?
For example, I give money to a bank for my pension, does the bank have a liability? Yes.
If I give (ok, forced to give), money to the government for my state pension, does the government have a liability? Yes. Both in legal and in practical terms.
On the state pension age - exactly. The point is they are going to default.
1. Raise the age - 5% for each year its raised, plus the extra contributions for nothing extra
2. CPI not RPI - about 10-15% off
3. Next? No increases
4. Means testing
They are going to default. Pure and simple. They already are defaulting.
On the civil service pensions, what the Unions haven't worked out is that the extra contributions aren't going to go into a fund. The liability and problem remains the same. It's just as bust as it was before. It's just forcing more money out of the Ponzi victims.
Why is it that you think all unemployed are under 25? Do it for others. Or how about if I exagerate the other way round and cherry pick the 104K a year HB cliamant, plus 5 kids (of different sexes to get the HB). Around 125-130K a year.
Actually you're making the point for me. If I use your figures, 8743.6 in benefits. 2,500 in taxation on min wage (and no benefits). 12,243 a year. Round that up, and its 13 bn out of a deficit of 150 bn. Getting them back to work doesn't solve the problem. It dents it.
Structural deficits are the ones that matter because cyclical ones take care of themselves.
No they don't. The problem is that it all depends on what the size of the actual debt is. If that is large, the deficit is never closed, and you have to default.
So real UK debt, 7,000 bn. Government income 550 bn. Care to calculate the gearing? Remember banks aren't allowed to go over 10 times now.
On top of that 7,000 bn, there is the cost of bailing people out in retirement who have no savings. About another 12 bn on top, at current benefit levels.
So you have to ask, what's going to give? Pensions is the main won. More defaults along the lines you've mentioned. Plus lots of real cuts. We haven't had any cuts in the level of spending - yet. Here you have to question where the money is going, since there are cuts in services. It's just the cost of what's left that's escalating. So again, you have to be clear about what you mean by cuts. Cuts in services - yes. Cuts in spending? No. Neither in absolute or real terms.
So using your numbers, its far worse than the dire situation I referred to