Crash the train to stop it
https://www.politico.com/news/magazi...-debt-00057606
Powell sounds like a big Volker fan. Volker crashed the economy to stop runaway inflation, fueling a recession that lasted through the early 80's. He got inflation under control but not after a few tough years. Powell is going to have a much tougher job. This matters for a simple reason. When the Fed tightens the money supply and raises interest rates, it inflicts pain on U.S. taxpayers who must pay interest on the nation’s debt. The higher the debt, the higher the pain. It was the Fed’s own experiments that helped create all this national debt in the first place. The Fed did so through an experimental program called quantitative easing, or QE. The importance of QE can’t be overstated. Under this program, the Fed created about 9 trillion new dollars between 2008 and today. (To put that in perspective, the Fed created only about $1 trillion in its first 95 years of existence. So it has printed 900 years’ worth of money in a little over 10 years, when measured against its historic rate.) All that money was injected straight into the Wall Street banking system, pumping up the very markets, like stocks and bonds, that are now threatened by the Fed’s tightening. Years of QE and voracious spending, from Reagan to Bush to Clinton to Bush to Obama to Trump to Biden, all fueled by debt. And that debt sounds like its going to get a LOT more expensive. |
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The U.S. recently saw some good inflation news. Falling energy costs bought down inflation for the month of July, suggesting the U.S. might be past peak inflation and the Fed may dial back slightly on a massive rate hike next month. Europe is not so lucky. A recent report from Citi has U.K. inflation hitting 18% next January. That makes the current U.S. inflation rate of just over 8% look relatively mild. In fact, last week we heard that German producer prices were up an eye-popping 37% year-on-year. Producer prices are often more volatile than consumer prices, but for Germany, it’s a worrying trend, especially as U.S. inflation may be slowing. The OECD has a similar view with inflation in many European countries running well ahead of North America. All European nations except France and Switzerland will see higher inflation in 2022 than the U.S. based on recent OECD estimates. As for voracious spending, this year’s deficit will decline by $1.7 trillion, representing the single largest decline in the federal deficit in American history, the Office of Management and Budget says. Despite the gains, the administration said Tuesday that it is forecasting a deficit of $1.03 trillion for the budget year that ends Sept. 30. That number signifies a movement away from the record deficit in 2020, which reached $3.13 trillion. So, Biden's deficit this year will be 67% less than Trump's was at its worst. Sounds like progress to me. |
So, what Whell appears to be saying is that his Dear Leader made a mistake when he picked Powell to succeed Yellen. At least he's admitting his Dear Leader isn't infallible, which is a first step out of the cult... :D
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Its all a matter of who is driving the engine, not the Feds who are to blame.
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Follow the spenders, not the gate keepers. https://www.thebalancemoney.com/us-d...ercent-3306296 |
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Powell is a Volker fan. That's evident by his comments in the Politico piece. Its also a topic in this WSJ piece: https://www.wsj.com/articles/jerome-...ed-11663595217 In a widely anticipated speech, Chairman Jerome Powell decided to be blunt. He scrapped his original address, according to two people who spoke to him, and instead delivered unusually brief remarks with a simple message—the Fed would accept a recession as the price of fighting inflation. That's right out of Volker's handbook. It's also true that the Fed has engaged in about 15 years worth of QE. This was intended to make banks flush after the 2008 mortgage meltdown, but it has continued long after because it has the alternative impact of keeping the cost of debt, including Federal debt, low. While not a bad idea in principle, in execution it fueled an appetite for additional Federal spending. Now it appears to be time to pay the piper, and you and I will be on the hook for it. |
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As far as a $1.3 trillion deficit sounding like "progress" to you - whilst comparing it to a 2020 budget that had the double-whammy of reduced revenue due to COVID and increased spending for the same reason - is: 1) Not really apples to apples; 2) Is still $1.3 trillion that will be added to the federal debt, and; 3) Can't really be called "progress" in this content. At best, one might say that it "sucks less". |
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The debt is the sum total of accumulated deficits. Accordingly, decreasing the deficit slows the increase in the debt. Even a believer in the fiction of supply-side economics should be able to understand this even if it involves math. |
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Have you ever looked at anything from a middle of the road perspective? In engineering we have a saying, statically the answer is always in the middle and never at the extremes. |
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