The fact that I put "make" in quotation marks should tell you something first off.
Second, I told you that the banks are the first to spend or lend this increase in the money supply so they are essentially using the value of the money yesterday to lend or spend today the "free money" they just received, for the price level from yesterday.
Third, "hoarders" as you call them are not evil and stealing from them because they are putting their money into their "long term savings" is at the very least a reprehensible, immoral act. You should probably think twice before legitimately arguing that people should be forced to give the banks their savings so they can then lend it out while having no accountability for being able to cover their customer's deposits.
Fourth, you say massive amounts of debt is caused by something else and yet provide no argument for it. What else would be the cause of behavioral patterns like that? If you incentivize people to borrow money at such low-interest rates, people will take you up on that offer much more so than if the interest rates were high.
Fifth, deflation does not cause economic depressions and has only correlated to one such time period, namely 1929-1934 during the Great Depression. Allow me to quote a study done by several Federal Reserve economists.
the only episode in which we find evidence of a link between deflation and depression is the Great Depression (1929-34). We find virtually no evidence of such a link in any other period. ... What is striking is that nearly 90% of the episodes with deflation did not have depression. In a broad historical context, beyond the Great Depression, the notion that deflation and depression are linked virtually disappears.
They also specifically mentioned Japan during the 90s which is clearly the allegory that is being referred to.
We note here that since WWII, one country has come close to having both a depression and
a deflation: Japan in the late 1990s. Is Japan’s recent slowdown from a historically high average
growth primarily due to its very low inflation rates? We doubt it. Since 1960, Japan’s average
growth rates have basically fallen monotonically, and since 1970, its average inflation rates have
too. Attributing this 40-year slowdown to monetary forces is a stretch. More reasonable, we think,
is that much of the slowdown is the natural pattern for a country that was far behind the world
leaders and had begun to catch up.
https://www.minneapolisfed.org/research/sr/sr331.pdf
It's depressing enough how economically illiterate most people are, though the fact that you took this manga's attempt at teaching bad economics seriously is far more concerning.
@Onsokumaru