The Fed and the Fate of the Dollar
Recorded at the Mises Circle in Fort Myers, Florida, 4 November 2023.
Recorded at the Mises Circle in Fort Myers, Florida, 4 November 2023.
Recorded at the Mises Circle in Fort Myers, Florida, 4 November 2023.
As the federal government continues its Ponzi scheme of issuing debt to pay for past debts, interest rates will increase to the point where this no longer is a tenable strategy—if it ever was.
Forget the New York Times and other publications that cheerlead for the current regime. Austrian economics spells out the consequences for reckless monetary policies, and those consequences are unavoidable.
Popular economic thinking holds that consumer spending is the most important driver of the economy. Actually, demand can’t exist without something first being supplied.
The boom-and-bust cycles are not natural to a market economy, contra Keynes. Instead, government through monetary manipulation creates them—and then politicians blame markets themselves.
Forget Vegas sports betting for reckless speculation. When the Fed officials make projections, the markets assume they are accurate. However, as Jerome Powell himself admits, forecasts are speculative at best.
No matter the situation, bank CEOs believe that the Big Score is just around the corner. Then reality hits.
Jonathan Newman rejoins Bob to explore more of the mechanics and political implications of the Fed's current state of insolvency.