What Will 'Build Back Better' Buy? Inflation.
Deficit spending and debt are out of control, and dragging down the purchasing power of the dollar.

Plans by congressional Democrats for trillions of dollars in taxes and spending hikes appear to be faltering in the face of opposition by Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.). Publicly and loudly concerned about the so-called "Build Back Better" bill's near-certain escalation of already worrisome federal debt and inflation, he has remained resolute in his demands for reductions in proposed spending increases as prices have risen across the board for Americans. Economic sense is on his side, since the ambitious bill threatens to further strain Americans' budgets.
"Throughout the last three months, I have been straightforward about my concerns that I will not support a reconciliation package that expands social programs and irresponsibly adds to our nearly $29 trillion in national debt that no one else seems to care about," Manchin warned in November of the measures dubbed "Build Back Better." "I, for one, also won't support a multitrillion-dollar bill without greater clarity about why Congress chooses to ignore the serious effects inflation and debt have on our economy and existing government programs."
Since then, inflation has hit a year-on-year rate of 6.8 percent, the highest level since 1982, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Also, since then the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that the Build Back Better bill "would result in a net increase in the deficit totaling $367 billion over the 2022-2031 period" under unrealistic congressional assurances that its policies would be temporary. In the more likely case that the extra spending becomes permanent, it "would increase the deficit by $3.0 trillion over the 2022–2031 period," says the CBO.
As a result, "Manchin over the past two weeks has intensified his criticisms about inflation and repeated his desire that Democrats hit pause on the process" of passing the Build Back Better bill, the Washington Post reported this week.
Manchin has good company in his fears that trillions of dollars of new federal spending is likely to send inflation rocketing even higher.
"In our assessment, the very front-loaded and relatively progressive nature of Build Back Better means that it is more likely to be inflationary in the short term," the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget cautioned earlier this month. "This inflationary effect appears likely to be both small and temporary, but it carries undesirable risks of contributing to a possible inflationary spiral in a time of already high inflation."
Unfortunately, "temporary" sounds an awful lot like "transitory," which has lost credibility as a description of inflation. Even Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell conceded that "it's probably a good time to retire that word" as the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar erodes month after month. Those months just might continue to drag on if the government keeps flooding the world with dollars.
"Widespread inflation always comes from people wanting to buy more of everything than the economy can supply," observed economist John Cochrane, a senior fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institution and an adjunct scholar of the Cato Institute. "Where did all that demand come from? In its response to the pandemic, the U.S. government created about 2.5 trillion new dollars, and sent checks to people and businesses. It borrowed another $2.5 trillion, and sent more checks to people and businesses. Relative to a $22 trillion economy, and $17 trillion of existing (2020) federal debt, that's a lot of money."
Tracy Miller, a senior policy research editor with George Mason University's Mercatus Center, agrees with Cochrane, especially regarding the danger of money created out of thin air.
"Inflation is not directly caused by government deficit spending," notes Miller. "It's the result of the money supply, which is controlled by the Federal Reserve, increasing faster than the output of goods and services."
"We're already experiencing the highest rates of inflation in 30 years, and it can be blamed on the expansion of the money supply since the beginning of the pandemic," Miller adds. He warns that the Build Back Better bill's reliance on debt funded with money created by the Federal Reserve threatens more of the same.
Some defenders of not just the Build Back Better bill, but of expansive government spending in general, argue that deficit spending is perfectly fine and that the government can just keep running up the tab.
"The government, unlike us, doesn't need to pay back its debts before it dies, because it doesn't die … the government can just roll over its debts in perpetuity," Matthew O'Brien argued with a straight face in The Atlantic in 2013.
High-profile investor Warren Buffett argued much the same point last year, though he allowed that, when you keep running the printing presses to pay your bills, you just might erode the value of their output. "What you end up getting in terms of purchasing power can be in doubt," Buffett admitted.
In a video discussion on government debt prepared by Hoover, John Cochrane argues that you can keep running deficits only so long as you keep the red ink within limits as a small share of a growing economy. That's not the case when debt is more than 120 percent of GDP and the federal government proposes to keep spending far more than it takes in.
"Growing out of debt requires that taxes equal spending for a generation or two while growth outpaces interest," Cochrane observes. "The U.S. situation is an intractably exploding debt-to-GDP ratio. Steady large deficits. Not a slowly declining ratio with balanced budgets that we might bump to a higher level with a one-time expansion."
In a situation like ours, he adds, "too much debt results in either sharp inflation, crushing taxes, and sharp and deep benefit cuts, or in a chaotic debt crisis which would be a financial catastrophe."
There are other reasons to oppose massive deficit-spending proposals like the Build Back Better bill, such as their tendency to centralize power in the hands of federal bureaucrats at the expense of individuals. But horror at the impoverishing impact of escalating government debt and the resulting inflation is a good place to start in objecting to these schemes.
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Bilk Back Better creating inflation would be ok since (1) there currently is no inflation and (2) inflation is always profit.
And 3) sophisticated people already are invested in material assets.
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And greedy corporations can stop what little inflation there is by just not raising their prices, even if their supply costs go up and they pay their workers more. They will just earn less profit.
Spittin' baccy only up $0.10. Minor issue, tobecertain.
Another myth is that millennials are fleeing cities because of crime. It’s just not true. Crime is a myth, as Larry Krasner in Philly pointed out. Covid is the reason people move.
Spending has been out of control for years and years, it's just that Congress has stopped pretending they give a shit. Gotta buy them votes, and voters are too stupid to realize their votes are being bought with their own money.
"Spending has been out of control for years and years..."
Entirely true. Which is never good but can prove tolerable so long as real growth occurs. Productivity soaking up much of those excess dollars.
Biden's actions - which were known campaign promises - have accomplished much the opposite. Driving up energy costs (which are an input cost for practically everything) and generally acting to suppress productive output across the board.
We were warned, but immiserating everyone other than the uberwealthy and politically connected was worth it in order to get rid of that offense to 'liberty' known as Bad Orangeman.
The Obama years were similar, but to a lesser degree. His regulations and obamacare stifled growth, but growth was good enough to not bury us like Pantshitter in Chief is doing currently. Too bad that Trump liked to spend like a drunken sailor, because we had significant growth and a booming economy that were ripe for spending cuts. That could have put us on a much better trajectory. Covid obviously fucked it up temporarily, but there is no way in hell it would be this bad if Trump were in office.
Trump's primary overspending was the extra 2 trillion in lockdown relief/stimulus funds as both sides bid on the election. His overspending in the first 3 years of his term was within normal parameters.
And then Biden promptly made that the new budget baseline (6 trillion instead of 4 trillion.)
Can you do the Bone Spur math on eliminating the national debt in under 5 years by never balancing the budget in one year? For examples of what a balanced budget is see Bill Clinton.
Can you do math at all?
Yeah, I did and the stable genius was NOT heading towards eliminating the national debt. I did notice Bill Clinton had balanced budgets and then surplus's which WERE heading toward eliminating the national debt.
First of all, presidents do not make the budget, congress does. If congress won't come up with a balanced budget, or no budget at all, as during the Obama administration, there really isn't anything the president can do about it.
I find it strange how the president somehow gets the blame or the credit when it comes to the budget.
Not sure what kind of presidential budget math you were doing but more than likely that math doesn't exist.
It's called a veto. Congress would need 2/3 to over-ride. https://www.businessinsider.com/how-clinton-surplus-became-a-6t-deficit-2013-1
"...Too bad that Trump liked to spend like a drunken sailor,.."
Got a cite for that bullshit? I doubt it; most TDS-addled shits don't
"Inflation" is just the latest wingnut.com myth invented in a desperate attempt to deny the fact that Biden is doing an amazing job. We witnessed the same phenomenon several weeks ago with those absurd claims he mishandled Afghanistan.
#DefendBidenAtAllCosts
PS — Once again, a 10 cent increase in the price of a single item (spittin' tobaccy) does not qualify as the i-word.
#HAPERTRANSITORY
Way to go, Brandon, you asshole.
This round of inflation is directly powered by Biden's oil policies. With gas and diesel prices up 40% from a year ago, the cost of every consumer good went up correspondingly.
And it wouldn't be hard to start reversing the trend. The White House needs to change its idiotic rhetoric about fossil fuels, open up the pipelines again, and make permits for exploration and drilling readily available.
Wind and solar are cheaper than fossil fuels now, or some bullshit like that.
And more plentiful.
Just not between 4 and 9 PM, so sit shivering in the dark while you keep California golden.
The less plentiful, the cheaper. If you greedy bastards would pop your main breaker off for a few hours every day, sea levels wouldn't rise.
But the cash for Trumps border kids is on hold. 450k per family. It’s anti immigration and would’ve fixed inflation- #450kpermigrantwillfixinflation
I just read in another thread that the trolls here are now getting 75 cents per post instead of 50. I can assure you, sir, there has been no improvement in quality. So, yes, the I-word
With BBB being in serious trouble, it's not hard to guess what the Democrat narrative for 2022 will be: "Inflation is the Republicans' fault because they wouldn't let us pass BBB which would have fixed everything!"
Heh. It would have fixed us, alright. Right into the poorhouse. Granted, the Left might be able to get us there anyway. Bread lines for the win!
No, bread lines for the unvaxxed.
No bread lines for the unvaxxed. Bread is only for the compliant.
No bread, lines for the unvaxxed. You won't get to eat, but at least you will be able to move about freely if you show how much you care about The Science.
bread lines are fine anyway, think of the community building aspect!
you are confusing science with politics. Common mistake.
What happened to both sides? All I see is biased reporting against Democrats from a conservative rag. I bet everyone at Reason voted for Trump.
Crack another bottle bitch, you're getting what you voted for. Celebrate more!
Broken.
Talking about “both sides” is what unprincipled, amoral partisans like you do.
That's got to be one of the dumbest things I've read in a while.
So you dont read your own posts? Might explain a thing or two.
Hes right though, partisan shills resort to "both sides" when they cant find a way to deflect anymore. Very obvious. Unless youre terribly naive, of course.
DK in full bloom.
You are obviously new here. Reason is Libertarian (by the modern twisted definition), not conservative and constantly bashes Trump. You are the one too overwhelmed with bias to understand the concept of dealling with a situation at hand. The democrats are in power right now, not Trump. Bad decisions are being made. It needs to stop.
Step out of your fantasy world for a moment and accept the fact that not everyone who despises the destructive nature of the party in power is a conservative or Trump supporter.
If a Democratic Senator standing in the way of trillions in Democratic spending policies on the grounds of debt and inflation concerns isn't a clear sign we've stepped into the twilight zone then I don't know what is.
The mayor of San Francisco saying the city needs to get tougher on crime?
fags being tough?
Barf.
"Inflation is not directly caused by government deficit spending," notes Miller.
The fact that the net effect with other things may not lead to price increases does NOT mean inflation had no affect on prices !
Fair. Tell ya what- this 1.75 trillion over 10 years- let's just take all of it (and then some) from the military budget which will be about 8-9 trillion over the same span.
Less inflation, more of our tax dollars going to actual useful things. Win/win all around.
How about you fuck off, buy some boots, get a real job and worry about yourself? That way we don't have to listen to you screech about wanting more of other people's money - you take care of yourself.
But noodle wristed little soyboys should think really hard about defunding the men protecting them.
It is kinda funny how they always talk big talk about taking people's guns away and suchlike, knowing that they personally aren't going to try it. They expect the police and the army to do the dirty work. And then they defund...the police and the army.
Progs appear to enjoy hypocrisy.
I suspect more of them will end up Rittenhoused in the coming months.
The deficit is driven by Medicare and Social Security, not defense.
Those should be more solvent post-Covid . . .
No, think of the long covid. There are definitely millions that are permanently maimed by it.
I'm good with that. Of course, along with that cut will have to be a foreign policy of nonintervention since the military will be even less able than they are now to be the World's Policeman.
How will your neocon buddies feel about that, I wonder? You know, the more I think about this the more I like it. Yes, let's get Dementia Joe's finger off the trigger.
I highly encourage you to make the democrats get serious about ending the drug war and downsizing the military.
They’ll do it, too, out of a deep sense of priorities and consistence with principles.
What makes spending it on other things more useful? Is there only waste and corruption in military spending?
Military is useful you parasitic idiot.
I notice the build back better program is not addressing the Medicare crisis
The Medicare program will not be able to cover his expenses in five years, and the Social Security program will have the same problem a few years after that.
Surely $1 trillion could be used to solve the Medicare deficit problem
Manchin appears to be the only democrat left in Congress who has a functioning brain.
No way. Dumping another 2 trillion dollars on the economy and paying people to take more time off work can't possibly cause prices to go up even more and supply problems to get worse.
Besides, people are hurting and need more cash to cope with the transitory inflation they are dealing with already.
Inflation expectations are part of the current problem, but I am skeptical that much of what we're experiencing inflation-wise today is the fault of the Fed. The Fed has some control over the money supply - but let's not forget that much of the growth in money supply (in a healthy economy) comes from the banking sector. Loans create deposits. The U.S. dollar (relative to other currencies) has been mostly stable lately - and that is another clue we're not necessarily in for a long, painful inflation cycle. Getting back to loans - just take a look at the Fed's charts on loan growth (in all the various categories, like consumer loans, commercial loans, mortgage loans, revolving credit, etc.) and you'll notice that none of the charts indicate a "hot" economy. The trends are positive, but not steeply rising (and some are not back to pre-pandemic levels). Governments all over the world shut down major segments of their economies last year, so we shouldn't be surprised we're seeing price increases now - as goods and services start moving again. The supply chain issues are real - and the Fed has nothing to do with those issues. Biden can't fix them either- at least not quickly. He could help by retiring the Jones Act and cancelling tariffs on imports (like Canadian lumber, Chinese truck frames, etc.) - but he won't.
" let's not forget that much of the growth in money supply (in a healthy economy) comes from the banking sector. "
The Fed buying up bonds and keeping their rate low in order to enable banks to keep offering artificially low cost money is not "healthy."
It isn’t healthy, because it tries to evade the laws of monetary economics. This was a good part of why we got into the inflationary spiral of the 1970s - the Fed was chasing interest rates, by trying to increase the money supply fast enough that the quantity of new money would bring interest rates down. Except that all that new money was what was causing the inflation in the first place, and the interest rates were dependent on inflationary expectations. It was only when the Fed started targeting the money supply, and not interest rates, that inflation was brought under control.
I agree - the Fed's "QE" experiment may not end well, but that is why I mentioned loan growth trends. Banks are offering low cost loans, but the demand for loans and the relative volume of loans doesn't show much overheating in the economy. I realize that the Fed's actions are helping the federal government borrow money at very low rates, but government debt - by itself - has never been the reason for high inflation (especially hyperinflation) cycles.
As if the banking sector is separate and apart from the Fed. It's called the Federal Reserve System for a reason.
The banking sector cannot create money out of thin air. Fractional reserve banking may look like it does, but in a free market, it doesn't really.
All increases in the money supply are, ultimately, the result of currency debasement or other manipulation of the economy by governments and politicians.
I don't agree with you. Banks can and do create money out of thin air - loans create deposits. Banks are capital constrained when it comes to making loans - not reserve constrained.
Also - "fractional reserve banking" is a myth. So is the "money multiplier". Here's a research paper from the Fed:
https://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2010/201041/201041pap.pdf
You poor deluded Keynesian..
The mofel of ' printing money/ inflation / control by interest rates is , oh, 40 years old?
You are utterly cluelss as to the deadly games they are playing.
They are playing Economic Russian Roulette with 5 loaded chambers.
The “too much money chasing too few good” explanation is similar to the tautology of MV=PQ (M=Money supply, V=Velocity of money, P=Price level, and Q=Quantity of goods and services). It is always true, because it has to be true. Over time, Q (nominal GDP) changes slowly, as does V (though V is positively correlated to ΔP, since there is a higher cost to not spending your money during inflation). That ultimately means that ↑M=> ↑P. The point is that when the Fed prints* money to finance deficit spending, if it is doing so more quickly than nominal GDP is rising, the result will ultimately be inflation. The “Too Much Money Chasing Too Few Goods” is just how we get there. You just need to ask why there is too much money, and the answer is, invariably, that the Fed is printing* money too quickly in order to fund deficit spending by purchasing Treasury debt.
*For the most part, the Fed “printing” money doesn’t actual entail running its printing presses, but rather they do it through offsetting bank deposits. The effect is the same, but costs less (no need for printing presses), and is more efficient.
I agree. The fundamental problem isn’t the amount of money, it’s that government policy redirects economic activity from useful free market activity to useless government preferred activity.
close butconditionally true.
Inflation is real money ( money printed vs. govt note sales) NOT put into the economy, therefore it dors not factor in the formula.
From a libertarian publication, I would at least expect the ability to make a distinction between the CPI ("price inflation") and the money supply ("monetary inflation").
Any increase in the money supply is a tax on people holding cash, whether prices increase or not. Printing money is not harmless even if the CPI remains stable.
Clearly we need massive tax increases to siphon off some of that excess money.
big miss here is always monetary offset
yes, if the Fed didn't offset, the crazy spending in BBB and elsewhere would cause more inflation
but CBs can always offset, so the choice is always theirs
so the fiscal choice is never really between inflation and not-inflation per se, but between the different levels of monetary policy that will offset the different fiscal choices to achieve the CB's desired inflation rate
which is to say, the more spending spewed out of the public sector, the harder CBs have to pump the brakes on all other economic activity -- unless they are deliberately inflating
as Fed is now
why they are choosing to inflate is a more interesting question
still seems most likely they really believe inflation is transitory (and there's an argument for making up the lost NGDPLT trend, though not at these levels)
probably too early to assume they've simply been claimed by the same Gramscian march that consumed so many other American institutions
which as good as America won't long survive a woke Fed
What about the two trillion Trump gave to the richest Americans in totally unnecessary tax cuts. Wouldn't that add to the national debt and then to inflation?
Tax cuts dont cause inflation. The spending bills do. Those bills you speek of were passed by congress. The president has no constitutional authority on the national budget.
False. Spending and prices arenot inflation.
Macroeconomic inflation is excess REAL money, if youd ever read an Econ book.
No one here has...
They are NOT PRINTING REAL MONEY.
Dimwit
Wow, someone is projecting. Economics classes were just a small facet of my Engineering degree. Spending money that doesn’t exist, ie deficit spending is absolutely a primary driving force for inflation because they need to print more money, which dilutes the value of all money. This is not just theory Its happening as we speak. You must be one of those people who say “follow the science’ but havnt read a single damn white paper or study.
Dimwit
What you are talking about is M1 vs M2 money and yes, both are driving forces for infaltion. This is a different toppic all together. This is regulated through interest rates. Lower interest rates and more borowing accelerate inflation and higher interest rates with less borrowing slows inflation.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/fredgraph.png?g=JW4Z
Graph says you are full of shit.
But the globalists say. That graph is from the IMF, so graph is prog bullshit.
TDS is clouding your judgment. Ultimately congress is responsible for those wreckless spending bills and the national debt.
Thank god for filibuster. If they circumvent it, thank god for the second amendment
Lead. A solid investment with a guaranteed future ROI.
Id like to share some with Prog Lefty Commie Limp Wristed Fruit Bat morons.
After all, they have none. It would only be fair since "we" have too much.
Thats the Prog thing to do!
Federal (deficit) spending NEVER does cause inflation. Inflations are caused by SHORTAGES of key goods and services. Unless BBB creates shortages of food, labor, shipping, certain natural resources (like lumber-now alleviated), oil or electronics components (all of today's key inflation indicators), Trucille is FULL OF SHIT, as usual.
AGAIN:
Inflation is not caused by federal deficits or any other type of money creation. Inflation always is caused by shortages of key goods and services.
ALWAYS.
Pick any inflation or hyperinflation in history and you will find that the cause was certain scarcities. Despite photos of money in wheelbarrows, there never has been an inflation caused by money creation. The reverse is true: Inflation causes money creation by those who do not understand the problem. Ex: Zimbabwe
Currently there is COVID hangover inflation, not a deficit-spending inflation.
To cure inflation, cure the shortages that caused the inflation.
In real economics supply and demand do effect prices, but still do not equal inflation. Inflation is the loss of buying power due to a weakening currency, which can most definitely come from deficit spending. Can you spend money you don't have, hand out IOU's, and still have good credit? I.e buying power. You need to find a better school.
But the US's "credit rating" is a result of assessments by large banks and foreign governments on the stability of the US. It's not directly related to deficit spending (which is not the same thing as the US printing money).
So if you need to deficit spend to make the US more stable in one way or another, that can strengthen the dollar.
Inflation is what we call a general rise in prices. Current relatively high "inflation" can be almost totally explained by shifts in supply and demand of goods and services as a result of the pandemic.
Deficit spending is another issue entirely, and it's actually just another term for keeping taxes low relative to government output. So you want to raise taxes or what?
A country's credit rating can also affect the value of it's currency.
If a nations debt is greater than it's GDP or whatever valuable capital, they use too back their currency, or vice versa. This is a variable often overlooked by some economists. Deficit spending is the road down this very path, most often countries print more money to try to offset the difference. When National debt and printing of money become the norm, that is when there is the danger of entering into an inflationary spiral. Just as debt and printing of money lead to Germanies spiral. After WW2 many economists saw the destruction that was caused by indebting the Germans for WW1, so now we have adopted the rebuilding process after a war instead of holding them liable for the damages .
I will take history over economic theories any day.
Big differences between Weimar Germany and today's US. Germany was forced to pay foreign debts in its own currency with no capacity to afford it plus the stuff Germans needed to live.
The US, by contrast, controls the world's reserve currency, and if someone wants to try to force it to send quadrillions of dollars overseas while simultaneously shutting down most of the entire country's output somehow, they can eat our nukes.
At any rate I don't see you advocating for raising taxes, so you don't actually care about this problem in a serious way.
Pick any inflation or hyperinflation in history and you will find that the cause was certain scarcities.
I pick Germany, right before WW2
Checkmate bitch.
Lie. Macroeconomucs says inflation is excess money created thats not used.
Youre citing a prevailing excuse created to blame it on, not the root cause
Bitch.
Macro economic inflation is excess real money. These are your words.
So are you now saying that Germany's inflation problems before WW2 had nothing to do with trying to print their way out of debt?
What dumbass books have you been reading.
Liars like you post these lies while NEVER CITING ECONOMIC THEORIES.
"Theories" are just that, Theories. They remain theories until they are proven, then they become theorem.
Other wise it's still just shit someone made up.
Not sure if you're referring to Weimar Germany - but there were a few moving parts - as is always the case when hyperinflation happens. The parts then were: losing a war, regime change, foreign denominated debts and a collapse in production that resulted in excessive "money printing", and collapse in the tax system -- all leading to hyperinflation.
Liar:
"Inflations are caused by SHORTAGES of key goods and services. "
Inflation in macro economics is excess real money created thats not used.It ' inflates' the money supply.
(Said Milton Friedman, not a pathetic lying Troll like you)
Liars like you post these lies while NEVER CITING ECONOMIC THEORIES.
.You make shit up.
Aka youre repeating Democrat media lies form 2012, the last time they told exactly the same lies.
Troll busted.
"dragging down the purchasing power of the dollar."
Well said... What's up with this new fad of inflation denial?
old fad. The Democrat media lied about it in 2012 under similar conditions, rising prices blamed on inflation when inflation was at a historic low of 0..8 %
Why are you lying about it?
I see you cant cite anything except blindly repeatuming a Media Talking Point.
Troll
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see prices rising significantly. But apparently it takes ignorance to deny it.
Nobody's in denial about rising prices, just whether it's helpful to refer to it as inflation (which might give people the impression that the problem is reckless money printing).
"Inflation" is up all over the world, in countries with differing monetary policies or no monetary policies at all. Prices are up because goods are scarce relative to demand. You could reasonably argue that this is because the entire global goods supply chain was disrupted by the pandemic and is still sorting itself out. Services and labor are also out of whack relative to where they were before, also related to the pandemic, and where I come from, the laissez-faire school naturally, all that means is markets are churning in response to reality, which used to be a value-neutral thing.
Well, I'm glad you acknowledge the difference between rising prices and reckless money printing.
Really? Have you correlated different monetary policies with price indexes around the world? Where is your data?
In any case, reckless money printing in the US, China, and Europe drives up prices globally because of international trade. And, as you point out, the US dollar is the reserve currency, which makes the effects of US currency debasement have an outsize influence on the rest of the world.
Tony - inflation is up more in the USA than in other developed nations.
"It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see prices rising significantly."
No, but apparently it takes an economist to know the difference between that and inflation.
Not that I blame you, because the media - mostly arts grads - does a terrible job explaining a difference they don't know exists.
Inflation - the decrease in the purchasing power of money, reflected in a general increase in the prices of goods and services in an economy.
Proof of the Inflation LIE.
The SAME LIES were floated during the Obama Biden economic disaster. Now Bitemes doing it again and stupid people are falling for it AGAIN.
And politically motivated LIARS are spreading the rumour again:
"Not to Krugman. He wants to panic the public into believing the money they have put into savings accounts and CDs will be rapidly eaten up by Fed-created inflation, so they will run out and spend that money now to get the economy moving again."
CNS News, Pat Buchanan from The Fed Trashes The Dollar at:
https://cnsnews.com/blog/patrick-j-buchanan/fed-trashes-dollar
No money was printed, and it isnt being printed now:
"Rarely has a myth been so impervious to simple facts. Pundits have been talking nonstop about the avalanche of money without bothering to actually look it up and discover that it just isn’t happening"
Like the lying Writer and Trolls on this page.
"Borrowing from other participants in the Federal Funds market merely redistributes existing reserves. There has been no burst of Fed lending at the discount window that would expand “liquidity.” The liquidity is just being moved around."
https://www.forbes.com/sites/beltway/2011/06/20/the-myth-that-the-fed-is-printing-money/amp/
Complicated stuff.
That doesnt sit well with politically motivated LIARS that like to spread hysteria...they like simple rumours and of course, NEVER have any proof...
"undesirable risks of contributing to a possible inflationary spiral"
There it is. There's always a buried sentence somewhere in an inflation-hawk piece that dumps the entire weight of the supposed risks on one hand-wavy bit of fluff.
If the US dollar ever goes the way of the Weimark Papiermark, we have bigger things to worry about than social spending policy. Hyperinflation has never happened in the United States (outside of the Confederacy). We do have tools that exist to prevent such things, and not just the Fed but the handy fact that the dollar is the US reserve currency.
In fact, mainstream economists are so loath to actually explain the problem they're talking about that it can only be the same old disingenuous horseshit. Scaremonger about inflation, which you'll say is caused by public spending, in order to reduce public spending, which, you'll all concede, is your goal all along.
This has the unfortunate tendency to make regular people stupid about how this stuff works. Higher than usual inflation? Guess we have to make poor people poorer! It's the only possible solution!
Fuck off.
I'm still trying to comprehend you defending inflation while also getting angry at those who argue against inflation by accusing them of wanting to make poor people poorer. The irony of that positioning is through the roof.
Libertarians and Republicans can never be trusted to make a good-faith economic argument at any time, because you are motivated primarily by ideological goals like dismantling Social Security and the rest of the distributive policies that make up the social safety net.
Give me a solution to your supposed inflation problem that leaves rich people poorer. Do that and I'll believe you actually care about the problem in and of itself.
Libertarians and Republicans don't want to dismantle Social Security for ideological reasons but for the simple reason that it is a pyramid scheme that screws people over.
Why is "making rich people poorer" a useful policy objective? How about we make poor people richer?
Truer words have never been spoken. That's why regular people like you usually choose policies that make poor people poorer, increase inequality, and decrease opportunities.
"That's why regular people like you usually choose policies that make poor people poorer, increase inequality, and decrease opportunities."
That is something certain parts of the political spectrum love to believe about their opponents, but the science says otherwise. To the extent we can judge these things, democratic elections almost always produce the 'right' result judged on such measures.
You mean like Germans voted the NSDAP into power, Italians voted the PNF into power, and Venezuela elected Chavez?
Ah, yes, no doubt: "the science" that gave us eugenics, Keynesianism, and scientific socialism.
If that's the science you believe in then definitely these are "the right results".
If you're totally ignorant about economics, as the author clearly is, then ask a sodding economist before writing about economics.
Economics is not partisan. It is the science of allocating scarce resources. It isn't about what you like or don't like. It doesn't say what we should try to achieve. It just tells us the best ways to achieve aims we have chosen.
The actual economics here are simple: stimulus is going to cause inflation, in isolation, but in context may be a good thing. The context we have suggests it's a good thing right now, despite the possible inflation.
It's worth noting, too, that inflation is not the same as the proxies for inflation that we use to try to measure it, and at this stage it is necessarily unclear whether we have high inflation, or whether we have less than the usual degree of correlation between proxies and reality. Inflation is about changes in the value of money, not about price increases - but the proxies look at rising prices, because _usually_ widespread rises are the results of inflation. It is entirely plausible, at the moment, that we are seeing across-the-board increases in true costs instead of a change in the value of money.
Does any of this mean I approve of any particular fiscal package? No. I don't know the details and I don't care. But it's obvious this article is completely wrong, written by someone who wants support for his existing view, rather than someone who wants to know what the economics has to say here.
Yes, and economics is crystal clear: the money supply should be driven by market forces alone, not by politicians or economic policy. Economics is also crystal clear what happens when governments print money or engages in massive stimulus programs: banks, billionaires, and politicians benefit, while the middle class suffers.
If those are the aims that you choose, then by all means, support the Democrats. That's why so many billionaires do.
As of Sunday, Dec. 19, Senator Manchin fired a shot that holed the BBB bill. The crew will need to toss a lot overboard if they wish to save it. Their alternative is to abandon it.
This didn't just happen on December 19. Senator Manchin has been clear about his opposition to the bill for nearly a year. He spelled out the conditions under which he was willing to vote for it and Democrats never even came close to meeting those conditions.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/10/28/president-biden-announces-the-build-back-better-framework/
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The days when French was sexy are long, long over.
Their Showers are Golden.
Phew!