Who's Really To Blame for Inflation?
No matter how you slice it, no one person or policy is solely to blame for surging inflation.

There are many takes on who's to blame for inflation. It's the president. It's the former president. It's supply chains. It's Russia. It's corporations.
With inflation now at 8.5 percent, understanding who is at fault matters. And with underlying issues ranging from the economic effects of COVID-19 and decisions made by central banks to policies enacted under recent presidential administrations and the interconnectedness of the global economy, there's plenty of blame to go around.
Inflation is a general rise in the cost of goods and services. It can occur for two reasons: an increase in the supply of money relative to the supply of goods or an increase in demand for goods relative to supply. While not all price increases are evidence of inflation—prices also fluctuate based on supply and demand—a sustained increase in prices across the board is evidence that one of these phenomena is at play.
One claim—that corporate greed causes inflation—can be easily dismissed as it offers little explanation for why it didn't cause inflation in the past. And the argument's biggest proponents—Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) and Sen. Bernie Sanders (D–Vt.) chief among them—never credit corporate generosity for lower prices. Similarly, the claim that President Joe Biden is solely to blame is untrue. The roots of inflation are numerous and disconnected from partisan narratives.
That's not to say Biden hasn't played a key role. Inflation climbed shortly after his election, and there's no end in sight. His signature achievement, the American Rescue Plan (ARP), pumped more cash into an overheated economy when supply chains could not keep up, spending almost $2 trillion when the output gap was closer to $400 billion. That's nearly five times more than what was needed, and the impact was predictable. Experts like Harvard's Lawrence Summers have been sounding the alarm for over a year.
But Biden's big spending bills weren't enacted immediately. The ARP wasn't signed until March 2021, and much of its spending occurred over several months. Likewise, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act—another commonly cited source of inflationary pressure—didn't pass until last November, and its spending won't peak until 2026. Plus, a study by the Chicago Federal Reserve found that the ARP alone can only partly explain recent inflation.
Those findings shouldn't be a surprise, because significant spending was underway before Biden ever made it to the Oval Office. Even before the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act—the most expensive bill signed by Donald Trump—the federal government was spending unprecedented amounts due to COVID-19. This act included cash payments to most Americans, housing assistance, boosted unemployment checks, and a pause on student loan repayments, which was recently extended by Biden. These actions may have been necessary at the time, but such policies began under Trump and are contributing to inflationary pressures now.
Putting the pandemic aside, Trump spent extravagantly, spending more in four years than President Barack Obama did in eight. While Biden may be fanning the flames of inflation, Trump collected the kindling and lit the match.
Not that Democratic policies would have been better. They pushed for more generous "enhanced unemployment," flooding states with cash, and near-permanent stimulus payments to parents. While only some of their ideas were enacted, the cash distributed didn't disappear, and neither did additional spending by many blue-state governors.
And while the 2020 election happened alongside increasing prices, an expansion of the money supply occurred long beforehand. This is important because one cannot understand inflation without considering the Federal Reserve. No president controls interest rates or dollars in circulation: Jerome Powell and the Federal Open Market Committee do. And Powell admitted last year that they got inflation completely wrong.
The Federal Reserve isn't the only central bank at fault. Just as worldwide governments spent generously on pandemic relief, the threat of recession made central banks across the world hesitant to raise interest rates in response to rising prices. The European Central Bank has kept rates consistent since early 2016. Meanwhile, the United Kingdom raised rates to where they were pre-pandemic, but like the Federal Reserve, the Brits lowered interest rates during the last two years.
Cheap credit might be appropriate when economies face unexpected shocks, but it becomes a problem once demand roars back. But even if central bankers and other policymakers weren't following each other's lead, there's further reason to expect inflation to be spiking now.
Inflation in the Eurozone sits at 7.5 percent, and price levels in the United Kingdom look similar. To an extent, these phenomena occur independent of the U.S.—it's ridiculous to suggest Biden's inauguration sparked inflation nearly 3,600 miles away. But just as Russia's war can impact the price of gas and wheat, the United States, too, can export inflation across the globe in an interconnected economy.
Breakeven inflation is now the highest it's been in the 21st century, but blaming any one person or policy only captures part of the economic picture. In reality, many actions—some recent and some dating back five years—primed the pump and escalated a worldwide run-up in prices.
Just as no one person caused our current predicament, it's unlikely any one person can solve it. Inflation will only abate when the pandemic ends, central banks roll back easy money policies, the private sector increases production, the supply chain stabilizes, and, yes, governments finally undertake more responsible levels of spending.
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—it's ridiculous to suggest Biden's inauguration sparked inflation nearly 3,600 miles away.
Is it? Is it really?
Not when we make such a big deal out of the USD being the reserve currency of the world.
Indeed. The Man is The Leader of The Free World!
Who is in turn ruled by the Easter Bunny!
That little bastard really thwarted some really high-quality intellect.
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Hey, you gotta have eggs to crack the eggs to make an omelette.
Did you see the bit where Meghan Hayes, WH Director of Messaging, poked her head out lf the costume? Not just any bunny can herd Brandon.
https://twitchy.com/dougp-3137/2022/04/18/identity-of-person-in-easter-bunny-suit-leading-biden-away-at-wh-egg-roll-explains-a-lot/
But Russia is more than 3600 miles away and Biden wants to blame them.
Inflation is mostly bullshit to justify more profit.
Oh, yeah corporations just suddenly worry about profits when inflation is occurring. How do you explain years of near zero inflation then, are the corporations not worried about profits then? Fuck, that's a stupid take.
Just knew their answer was going to be Trump. Reason is a one trick pony any more and a two bit whore.
Inflation will not end. The dollar is collapsing and the solution will be a new national currency OR the global world currency of the NWO.
You decide.
The plan is to force pain and compliance for the latter.
This was planned.
What else is ridiculous is the author failed to mention the major issues Biden caused by killing the energy industry in the country. R
Reason's leading economics expert says the Biden economy is the best ever because the two most important metrics — rig count and the Warren Buffett Net Worth Index — are doing well.
The i-word is wingnut.com disinformation. Literally the only price increase in the entire country is an extra 10 cents per pouch of spittin' tobaccy.
#DefendBidenAtAllCosts
Yep. Tobacco.
And food, gasoline, rent, wages.
Every word you type is wrong and a lie.
Including "and" and "the."
Nancy Pelosi, paging Nancy Pelosi.
What, time for another hair do?
Who in the hell is Jonathan Bydalk?
I'm guessing he's a DNC employee.
With his feigning ignorance of people being able to anticipate the impacts of known future events, that's a guarantee.
Jonathan Bydlak is director of the governance program and the fiscal and budget policy project at the R Street Institute, a center-right think tank.
The word bydlak has an unfortunate entymology.
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/bydlak
What a bydlak.
Fuck Joe Biden.
Fuck Joe Biden.
Fuck Joe Biden.
I use crypto. 'Ssst ow I
Fuck Joe Biden.
What do you buy with crypto? Can I buy a side of beef at the farmer’s market? Or a piece of land?
Uhm, bullshit. One policy:
If you print until you have twice as much money in circulation, then the money is worth half as much. It's the very definition of inflation. Right now, the dollar is worth half as much as it was in 2020, and it's just taking a few years for that home truth to work it's way through the economy.
Fed balance sheet != money in circulation
Fed balance sheet != money in circulation (yet).
The fed talks about reducing the money by 95 billion per month until it is back to former levels (sometime in 2037). You and I both know that's a load of crap, and will never happen.
The subhead of the article is that no one person or policy caused inflation. I am arguing one specific policy caused inflation: printing and spending more money than previously existed: and thus the premise of the article is entirely wrong. He finishes up saying we can't blame any single person, which is true, but entirely fails to answer the original question. The policy that caused inflation is increasing the amount of money. It is the very root cause of inflation.
Mr. Bydalk just happened to print a stupid article at the wrong time. This should be a tailing comment to the "cuban health care article," but when people say completely wrong things they should be mocked, ridiculed, and told they are wrong, to their faces.
When we ignore this, we get bullshit like the numbers of hunger in America. Look it up on Google, I will wait. 1 entry in the first 10 result links to a "Global Hunger Initiative" that says the starvation rate in the US is 2.5% - it turns out this exact value is given to all developing nations, for the last couple of decades, as an arbitrary minimum number. Which is bullshit. The other 9 links all point to the 10.5% of households deemed "food insecure" at some point during the year. More bullshit. You can look around to the lack of people dying of starvation, the low numbers of (usually well-fed) people begging at street corners, the all around porkening of America, and see this is not so. But because people don't call bullshit, don't laugh in these peoples' faces, we are now in a world where this is presented as a "consensus". Is that the bullshit world you want to live in?
“Is that the bullshit world you want to live in?”
NO!
Keep it up and you will be kicked out of the congregation.
“I don’t want to belong to any club that would accept me as one of its members.” 🙂
Yeah, someone's Twitter account is at serious risk here. 😀
The poor and indigent in America are more likely to be overweight than starving.
"If you print until you have twice as much money in circulation, then the money is worth half as much."
+10000000000. Well Said....
I find it humorous the left is blaming the Cares Act on Trump when it was the Democrats who PITCHED the bill and thwarted the Vote on it also.
Believe it or not Democrats play this game....
We're not stupid or at fault because the right didn't STOP US.... lol..
" Right now, the dollar is worth half as much as it was in 2020, and it's just taking a few years for that home truth to work it's way through the economy."
Ah, more faith-based economics. If right now the dollar were worth half as much as in 2020l prices would have doubled since 2020. They haven't.
To my observation, there is no-one so vociferously ignorant on economics as an American right-winger.
My vehicles are worth twice as much today as in 2020.. So you can take your delusional *pretend* and shove it up your *ss.
Thanks for proving my point.
Damn you’re dumb.
Seriously. What is twice as much cash does not mean twice as much value. I but you have to remember Keynesian economics believe in absolute Innate value of currency. Things that highlight economics value is completely set by demand and perceived value, (for example the soviet Russian tractors worth less than the metal they were made from), induces full cognitive dissonance.
He proved that you were projecting.
"To my observation, there is no-one so vociferously ignorant on economics as an American right-winger."
This is CLASSIC projection from a steaming, lying, pile of lefty shit.
Fuck off and die.
The markets couldn't handle an immediate doubling of prices, so they rise slower. Fuck are you stupid? If prices doubled overnight the entire economy would crash. Corporations and business owners understand this, so they raise prices slower, often reluctantly. They also decrease the volume of product being sold. Instead of a package containing 14 oz of product, they now contain 10 oz, but get sold for a little more. So you are now paying more for less. And some prices have doubled, see gas. People also stop buying or paying for non-essentials to help stretch their wages, see Netflix. Yeah it's only $15 a month, but that's where people start cutting first. This is also why inflation continues past when the excess money starts to leave the system, which generally takes time. Doubling the monetary supply takes even longer. Face it, inflation is here for the long haul, and at this point about the only cure for it will be a deep recession.
The new money doesn't enter everybody's hands all at once. First, it hasn't all been generated at once. Second, it enters through certain avenues, usually (but not always) at the top (Cantillon Effect) then filters down or through to everyone else over time. Prices will rise accordingly. Of course, not everything remains equal so there are a myriad of other things that will affect prices, including supply chains, productivity, shifts in demand and many, many other things. Statists hate having to produce in order to consume so prefer printing their way to obtaining goods and services, and will cover their arses saying it wasn't the money printing that caused it.
yeah I came on here to say pretty much this: money supply has increased so of course prices in the weakened dollars will be higher.
Is one person to blame for that increased money supply? No, but who cares, the State is to blame for it, as it is in the other countries experiencing similar problems.
My bad, sorry.
I accidentally flipped the switch labeled "DO NOT TOUCH: CAUSES SEVERE INFLATION". Thought it was the breaker for the lights in the den.
I just set it back; should be fine now.
America needs the economic equivalent of Pepto Bismol.
No, it needs an enema.
Printer went brrrrrrrrr?
No matter how you slice it, no one person or policy is solely to blame for the Holocaust.
Misek will be by to correct you.
what Holocaust? ~~RM
It is true that no one policy caused the current inflation.
It was ALL of the policies of the current administration.
"Who's Really To Blame for Inflation?"
Maybe the woman in the photo who bought a $2000 baby stroller for grocery shopping.
Here’s one clue as to why we have inflation: people with eight-figure net worths were getting stimulus checks.
The stimmy checks were a tiny tiny tiny drop in the huge river of shitty covid spending.
And don't forget quantitative easing.
That 120 billion a month the Fed used to buy Treasury and mortgage debt didn't come out of thin air.
Oh wait.
Yep - the Fed can create money (electronic money) out of thin air. One important thing to remember is that quantitative easing was mostly a big asset swap - Treasury bills, notes, and bonds were swapped for the new "money" created by the Fed. No new net financial assets were added to the economy - only the composition of the financial assets. Also - much of that new money (electronic - don't forget) ended up in the banking system's reserve accounts - which is a closed system. Banks never loan reserves - except to other banks. That's why QE didn't cause the massive inflation that so many predicted early on.
While it is possible people with 8-figure net worth were getting stimulus checks. It would only have happened if they didn't make anywhere near those 8 figures at any point since 2019. The really way the 8-figure people made the money was the PPP loans. A business owner could legitimately apply for a loan because revenue was down for the specified time but then the business boomed a month later. As long as the owner still used the PPP funds to cover payroll all that other money rolling in doesn't have to go to wages and is pure, untaxed profit, to the owner when the PPP loan is forgiven.
"inflation" and "higher prices" are not the same thing.
"inflation" has one single cause and everyone knows what it is. Printing 40% of all dollars in existence in the last two years will do that. The dollars are intrinsically worth less now.
"higher prices" are mostly due to inflation but in a few cases some actual real world supply chain issues contribute to the price rise. But that's not inflation.
Thanks for coming to by Ted talk. Bydlak probably should have learned these things before writing this article.
I hate to be that guy, but in fact inflation does mean increasing prices. Prices being increased by printing is technically "monetary inflation". This is a case of definitions being slung around loosely for a few decades.
It is kind of like how the term "decimated" is often thought to mean "nearly destroyed" instead of "reduced by one tenth". Constant misuse has caused people to assume it means something different.
Fuck. They even went ahead and put that one in the dictionary the incorrect usage is so common. :-!
The simplest definition of inflation that I am aware of is: an increase in the supply of money.
An increasing cost in goods and services is a symptom of inflation, not inflation itself.
Apologies, Overt. Misthread.
This is why we should differentiate between price inflation and monetary inflation.
When speaking of inflation, I think it’s best to do it in two different terms: Monetary inflation, which is a rise in the money supply (the DuckTales scenario), and price inflation, which is a rise in prices. Though intertwined, these things are quite different.
First, monetary inflation. This is a pretty basic measurement. How many dollars are floating around out there?
As you can see, monetary inflation has been increasing and accelerating since Nixon went ‘full fiat’ in the 1970s. Since then, the number of dollars in the system has been doubling about every 11 years, with covid rapidly accelerating that trend.
How well did this speech hold up? Did going completely off the gold standard and allowing bankers and politicians to always print help ‘the working man’? Is your dollar ‘worth just as much today as it was yesterday’?
This is why the founders wrote in the Constitution that only gold and silver shall be money. They had first-hand experience about the dangers of paper money, thanks to the collapse of the Continental Dollar. They knew the politicians would ALWAYS find an excuse to print, and that citizens would be the ones holding the bag via devaluation of their savings and labor. (There would be winners, though! The people close to those who run the literal money-making machine ALWAYS do well.)
Price inflation is often related to and affected by monetary inflation, though MANY additional factors impact price inflation. A shortage of goods, additional cost of links in the supply chain, rising labor costs, and additional regulations all negatively affect price inflation. On the other side of the equation, improved efficiency, cheaper materials, reduced regulations, or increased automation tend to drive prices down (though rarely enough to actually see price decreases).
https://simulationcommander(dot)substack(dot)com/p/inflation-and-you
like literally, and millennial-literally
Inflation causes increasing prices, it doesn't mean that. Inflation means an increase in the money supply. And it always, ALWAYS has. Monetary inflation is redundant.
Even before the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act—the most expensive bill signed by Donald Trump—the federal government was spending unprecedented amounts due to COVID-19. This act included cash payments to most Americans, housing assistance, boosted unemployment checks, and a pause on student loan repayments
Ha! Everyone knows that Trump's massive spending did NOT contribute to inflation!
IT WAS THE KEYSONE XL THAT DID IT!
turd lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit
"IT WAS THE KEYSONE XL THAT DID IT!"
And Hunter Biden's laptop.
But it's not our fault the Republicans didn't STOP-US!!!! /s
Democrats wrote 87% of the Cares Act, Pitched it, and Thwarted it's vote... You know this... Deception is all you've got.
Look you pedophile cunt, this has been covered a dozen times before when you’ve spewed your bullshit. So fuck off.
And leave children alone you rapist.
Judging by the title, I thought that this will be a Greenhut article. Apparently, he wasn't available, so the DNC had no other choice than to send a new guy.
Greenhut would have written a much better piece with better arguments. While I don't agree with his economic outlooks most of the time, Greenhut is a far better writer than this fool.
No no no. Either:
IT'S ALL TRUMP'S FAULT
or
IT'S ALL BIDEN'S FAULT
Complexity and nuance are not allowed. Only tribal signaling.
Fuck off Pedo Jeffy, you sock fucking groomer pervert.
>>inflation now at 8.5 percent,
now do it in real numbers.
0.085?
you technically correct is the best kind of correct people slay me.
Like many things inflation has many fathers. I think overspending during the pandemic and the post pandemic demand rebound play big parts in its cause. What I worry about most is that there will be attempts at a quick fix for inflation and that this will make things worse. I think the best strategy is to let the supply of goods rebuild and let the excess money in the economy dry up. Both take patience, something that is always short of suppy.
When really the only 'father' is compulsive denial and deceit.
It takes a complete moron not to have seen this coming BEFORE it all started.
Spoken like a true Monday morning quarterback.
If this was so easy why didn't the public push back when the Covid relief started. You can check my comments, I thought we should help people in trouble, but not send out checks to everyone. Most people were happy to take the money then, but unhappy with inflation now.
The government lacks the necessary information to implement such policies. As a result, the only actual options are "checks for nobody" or "checks for most people". The first option is the libertarian/conservative option and it works. The second option is the progressive option and it leads to economic disaster.
Our government has a system to assist people affected by the pandemic, it was unemployment insurance. That should have been the main tool the government used, not checks for everyone.
A sensible comment. But the massive deficit spending funded by the Fed's monetization of the debt was a primary driver along with shutting down the economy which never needed to be done. Failure at every level of govt, CDC, NIH, Two Presidents, Congress, the Fed and above all a media cheering it all on.
End the Fed...once you kill the bank, it forces the govt to reduce spending, end deficits and fund malinvestments and wars. Central banks are the biggest threat to liberty, not Islamic Extremism or Putin..
That's what the government tried to do. Then they discovered that that didn't cover huge groups of people who legitimately are "in trouble", among them the self-employed and landlords.
Furthermore, since the checks were financed through inflation, almost everybody ended up substantially worse off than if the checks had never gone out.
No, it does not. Inflation is solely the consequence of the use of fiat currency and the existence of the Federal Reserve.
You should fear that because it is unavoidable that "things get worse": for decades, Americans have borrowed against their future, used the military to force other nations to accept bad debt, and voted themselves ridiculous levels of benefits and low taxes. The current wealth and lifestyle of Americans is not sustainable.
The only way the "excess money in the economy dries up" is if the Fed raises interests rates to where they ought to be. And that will cause a major recession and major problems for both private and public borrowers. Sorry, but there is no way out of this.
Another way of looking at it is that the US has integrated itself so well with the rest of the world, both in terms of open borders and free trade, that Americans are regressing towards the economic mean of the world, which means a big loss in living standards and wealth. That's what progressives wanted, after all.
Americans regressing to a world economic mean was a natural process. Our country came off WWII in a very advantageous position. Most of the manufacturing base of developed countries was in ruins and while ours was not. Americans also had access to cheap natural resources from third world countries. Time has moved on and manufacturing capacity of the developed world has been rebuilt, in some cases better than our own. Third world nation no longer need to sell cheap natural resources. An integrated world economy is not a choice it is a natural process.
You can only go back in time in science fiction stories not in real life.
summarized as, "Hey look over there! A Unicorn....." lmao...
The US won WWII because it had a massive, highly efficient manufacturing base before WWII.
No, not at all. The US had a culture, tax system, regulatory system, education system, immigration system, and economy that was much better and more competitive than everybody else's. But progressive government policies have destroyed all that; that is the real reason the US is regressing to the mean.
Oh, the US certainly can't go back; Americans are fucked. But let's be clear about who fucked it up: neoliberals, neocons, and progressives.
Well Said.
Who should be put down like rabid animals for the most part.
"Who's Really To Blame for Inflation?"
The helium lobby.
they always sound like the Lollipop Guild on the phone
Everything mentioned in this story was done by the government, but the government's not responsible? "reason" has hit a new low in apologia for Big Government Libturdism. But Soros will toss the author a quarter.
Spot on
My vote is for the people who dumped an extra 4 trillion bucks on the economy, and the people who unnecessarily shut down productive workers with COVID lockdowns and quarantine policies for positive tests.
A vote to conquer the USA and replace it with a Nazi(National Socialist)-Regime???
It's rather dis-tasteful to see the citizens seem to have forgotten the USA (defined by the U.S. Constitution).. Which never allowed the 'feds' to be dumping counterfeit 'fiat'..
Article I Section 10...
No State shall ....make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts...
That day a "democratic" [WE] mob took over the USA and replaced it with a democratic Nazi-Regime.
I've always wondered about that clause (nothing but gold or silver), but the weasle words will always be "debts". So, if you're sending out checks for sitting on your couch, it's not a "debt", it's charity (at the point of a gun from the donors' perspectives). Just like on the printed currency, "debts", not "payments". It's about temporal order. But just the same, the interest and principal on the national debt certainly does fall in the legal category of "debt".
Personally, I'd go to a gold standard tomorrow, even if it meant that suddenly the Saudis and every Hindu woman with her gold nosering were now the richest people on the planet.
You're not going to be employed by reason for very long if you want to actually critique multiple possibilities instead of shrieking about how everything bad is 100% the fault of government.
Funny, I think his problem is not shrieking enough that it was 100% the fault of the government... looks like an apologist for the State to me.
Yes. It is not one person or policy but one parties policies.
It is Biden's and the Democrats total policies that are causing inflation. It all started with the Democratic governor's shut-downs and the Democratic sponsored Covid relief bill that yes, the Republicans signed on to also, and then escalated with Biden's 40+ executive orders after his inauguration. The main driver though is energy. That is because everything we grow, everything we manufacturer, every service preformed and everything we transport takes energy. Biden's and the Democrats rush to undo everything Trump did and their insane new green policies are the main driver of inflation.
If you look at the growth of Federal entitlements starting with LBJ which was approx $3 billion annually and has now increased to over $1.2 Trillion annually - that's about a 10.5% increase annually. The country has been inflating the cost of entitlements for 60 years with horrific outcomes. Open Borders will make this much worse!
Who is to blame for inflation?
I blame the judge who gave the Inflation Fairy parole.
We put him in a cell back in the early 1980's, but evidently prison didn't rehabilitate him one bit.
Let that be lesson to all of you: You can't trust a fairy.
The FRB Balance sheet growth, covid stimulus payments and the ever-expanding entitlement programs are the major structural reasons for inflation; and most were exploited on the biden obama watch.
Monetary inflation, by definition, is the increase of the money supply; nothing else. Monetary inflation causes an increase in consumer prices. Perhaps what you mean to say is that there are other causes of increases in consumer prices. There are, but they are negligible compared to monetary inflation.
In particular, the monetary inflation rate as measured by M2 is about 12% YoY. Subtract about 3-4% productivity growth and you are left with 8-9% price inflation, which is, in fact, what we have. So, price increases ("price inflation") requires no other explanation than monetary inflation (an increase in the money supply).
Who controls the money supply? Technically, the Federal Reserve. But their monetary policy is ultimately determined by Congress and the administration.
Supply chains and pandemics have nothing to do with it. Inflation ends when a nation fixes its money supply, either by a sound money policy based on fiat money (never happens), or by adopting a currency backed by precious metals.
A publication that implicitly accepts or condones the existence of the Federal Reserve and fiat money cannot be called "libertarian", not even remotely.
NOYB2! Good Lord, applying horse sense, Cutting the Gordon knot of “complex economics”, not even blaming Trump a little bit.
You sir, are obviously not a professional pundit. 🙂
Relative to the size of the economy, the Fed balance sheet increased by about the same from 2014-2022 as the amount of money printed by the Weimar Government in Germany in the 1920s.
The mystery that everyone should be trying to explain is how inflation is somehow still under 10% so far.
It is not...
The size of the economy is largely irrelevant to monetary inflation or "price inflation".
M2 monetary supply increased by about 12% YoY. This means a monetary inflation rate of 12%. But since the US economy is improving productivity at probably around 3-4% a year, prices ordinarily ought to go down by that much every year. Subtract the natural decrease in prices from the monetary inflation rate and you end up with the YoY "price inflation" that we actually have.
M2 may be up 12% in the last 12 month, but it's up more than 50% over 4 years, and 100% in the last decade (when inflation has mostly supposedly been fairly tame). Where's the "pent up" monetary inflation that didn't happen from 2018-2021?
Not to mention that M1 is up from under $5Trillion at the start of 2020 to over $20Trillion currently. A lot of that didn't get levered up yet by the banks to reflect at the M3 level, but what's coming down the road when it does?
That is a reasonable question. I think a lot of that money went into the stock market and housing market. Fake as those gains are, they are popular with voters and not perceived as the inflation they actually are.
The effect on prices and the CPI depends significantly on how the new money is brought into circulation. The COVID-related money printing ended up putting more money directly into the hands of consumers and hence affected the CPI more than it did before.
What scares me going forward is that M1 growing so much faster than M2 likely happened because the Fed started buying T-bonds directly rather than "laundering" the printed money through the banks.
As the Fed winds their balance sheet back down, that'll mean either the gov't will have to repay multiple $Trillions in debt (not gonna happen), or those bonds will have to be sold out into the banking system, where they'll presumably get leveraged and explode the M2/M3 totals even as M1 winds down; even a return to a double-digit prime rate might not be effective at beating back the inflation that would come from that.
Without the binge during the pandemic, the need for the SSTF to be cash out its T-bond holdings as well would have been a big concern, now it's just an also-ran exacerbating factor given the relative magnitudes of what's going to be moving around in the financial system.
Putin Putin Putin..aggregate demand..aggregate demand..transitory..supply chain..covid covid covid
Ok now we can get to brass tacks. Deficit spending fueled by the Fed's monetization of the deficit. Period..end of story.
How about a better system. The Federal Govt cannot run deficits for any reason at any time. And the Federal Reserve is shut down. And credit can only come from savings not thin air. Inflation solved, liberty returned and American becomes an industrial giant again with a strong dollar, increasing wages and slight deflation (the natural order of a free market). Why any "right" or libertarian writer supports the very existence of a central bank is silly.
Well said
Of course Biden's inauguration didn't spark inflation. The money printing has been going on since long before that. There's only one real cause: printing money.
Inflation has been going since we got off the gold standard. But it went into overdrive with Congress's reaction to COVID; the money supply jumped in a dramatic way. And Biden certainly wanted to make things much, much worse.
Inflation of the Fed's magic rubber inflatobucks is entirely the fault of the Fed, even if they do it at the urging of the Ruling Party. Don't try to obfuscate it.
-jcr
Inflation is the fault of the American voter: American voters want policies that inevitably have inflation as its consequence, and politicians (both Democrats and Republicans) give it to Americans. Good and hard.
Justice demands the redemption of the dollar at 1/16 of a troy ounce. The best way to accomplish this is probably to sell off all the land that the federal government unconstitutionally seized from the western states.
-jcr
Good Start.
We can also round up the leftists and take their shit away from them before expatriating them permanently. For reparations.
Paging Ross Perot and T. Boone Pickens (are either still alive?). My father was a big supporter of Perot in 92. Going off the gold standard was probably one of our largest mistakes, yeah it arguably produced some short term good (albeit based on the economic malaise and inflationary periods of the 1970s and early 80s would provide more than adequate counter arguments) but fiat currency makes it to east to try and print your way out of problematic economic periods, eventually leading to even worse economic periods.
Very few people here give a shit about facts. They give a shit about Republicans winning elections, because they are trash bigots in a cult.
You are a pinhead, and that is a fact.
-jcr
You certainly never gave a shit about facts. You’re a flamboyant liar. It’s like you’re going on a rave, but instead just lying.
The Federal Reserve printing money is what causes inflation; nothing else.
It's not just 1 person, but hard left economics caused inflation. With coronvarius as the excuse they needed to implement it at truly unprecedented scale. Stimulus, massive unemployment checks, PPP, mortgage/rent/student loan forbearance, they all caused it. As did systematically forcing business to not produce.
I agree and can't stand how the republicans conveniently seem to always forget how much of this happened under Donald Trump's watch, with his full support and enthusiasm. If republicans actually believed in the free market or freedom, they could have used it as an opportunity to distinguish themselves from democrats and not just the "not quite as hard left" party.
Donald Trump should have said that any mayor or governor implementing lock downs will stand trial for systematically denying the 14th amendment protections on liberty of the city's/state's resident. Donald Trump should have not implemented one bit of additional financial assistance and told people that they already have state level unemployment and if they didn't prepare for a rainy day with an emergency fund, that's on them. And the rent/mortgage moratoriums are the most disgusting anti private property, anti sanctity of contract disgrace, effectively forcing landlords and banks to become homeless shelter managers, and this happened under Trump's watch.
^THIS... The most legitimate Trump smear I've ever come across.
But keep in mind; *ALL* of those smears originated in the Democratic Party. Heck they even thwarted the vote on the Cares Act.
It is quite sad; That Trump is honored as the most freedom pushing president in over a decade (or century) when truth be told his record would be the biggest shame in the earlier 1900's... The Supreme Court actually ruled FDR's "New Nazi-Deal" (S.S. and Medicare) UN-Constitutional...
This has been going on for decades; it didn't start with Donald Trump.
Congress allocates money and the president is required to spend it. Agencies make rules and Trump was too politically weak and unsupported to do anything about it.
In any case, the real fault lies with American voters: Americans want massive government spending, debt, and money printing. They vote for it. Republicans and Democrats alike. And that's why Congress keeps doing it. Republicans and Democrats alike.
I can sell my used car for more than I paid for it new. I can sell my home for 250k more than I purchased it for less than a year ago.
This is inflation; the dollar is collapsing. Years of bad economic policy got us here.
We are divested from gold and now the petrodollar. Our cash is worthless.
The way forward is a new national currency.
End the fed.
What exactly is that supposed to mean? You just declare all current debts null and void and invalidate any money people have saved?
I mean, if you are going to exchange the new currency for the old one at some ratio, nothing really changes.
Only the Federal Reserve is responsible for inflation, nobody and nothing else.