Currently, new fiat money is generally created by central banks that gives out that money as loans, or more recently, by central banks simply creating money to buy assets (called quantitative easing).
What would likely the effects be, if a new country decided that their central banks created a fixed amount of money per year, let's say 4% new money per year, and gave this money directly to the government?
Who has the authority to enforce this plan when the government wants to spend more than they have? Even if it were enforceable, it runs into the standard monetary-policy-mismatch boom/bust problems as the real economy (actual trade in goods and services) expands faster or slower than 4%.
Interesting comment and good points that I had not considered.
I guess there is a risk of the government simply taking control of the central bank whenever they want (assuming they don't already have control from the start), and then set the interest rate to whatever they want (most likely something very low, so they can spend extra, perhaps during a war). However, to me it seems likely, that governments will have a harder time changing a fixed rate, than a dynamic one. Further, the currency's value would likely drop abruptly if the government would decide ... (read more)