Mergers, Acquisitions, and Market Manias: The Fed Has Made Things Worse
As the economy begins to slow, the results of the Fed's money pumping are showing up in mergers and acquisitions.
As the economy begins to slow, the results of the Fed's money pumping are showing up in mergers and acquisitions.
After the 2008 housing bust, the government supposedly set up a fail-safe mortgage program aimed at preventing future bubbles. It failed.
While Fed policies openly try to make prices "stable," the central bank actually is creating economic instability and an impoverished economy.
Money velocity's role in forcing up prices is misunderstood because today's monetary "authorities" fail to consider how new money is injected into the economy.
Popular economic wisdom says central banks can counter harmful effects of inflation by raising interest rates. Unfortunately, such moves carry their own forms of misallocation of resources and capital.
Last year, Joe Biden and his administration claimed that inflation was "transitory." This year, Vladimir Putin gets the blame. Next year, Biden will blame American businesses. And the beat goes on.
Fed chairman Jerome Powell recently claimed they were "targeting" the "neutral" interest rate. The Fed cannot set or even know that rate, for it doesn't come from government authorities.
Propping up congressional deficit spending, juicing equity markets, and constantly recapitalizing commercial banks are the Fed’s true mandates.