Real Wages Fall for Two Years Straight as “Transitory” Inflation Turns Stubborn
The disease has always been the easy-money fueled boom. Price inflation is just a symptom.
The disease has always been the easy-money fueled boom. Price inflation is just a symptom.
Even a partial weakening of the dollar's global demand will limit the US regime's ability to throw its weight around internationally. Yet Washington is unwilling to do what's necessary to prevent it.
The current banking crises have deep roots in US financial history. Monetary authorities have engaged in inflationary behavior for more than a hundred years.
Walter Bagehot, as Jim Grant writes, believed that bankers and central bankers should exhibit financial discipline. He would not recognize today's banking world.
Contrary to Krugman, DeSantis and others warning about a CBDC aren’t being paranoid: they are simply drawing the obvious conclusions from history.
As markets settle down after the last set of bank failures, political elites claim the crisis is behind us. But it is not over, not by a long shot.
Bob and Jonathan Newman break down Krugman's incorrect notion that we shouldn't be paranoid about CBDCs.
If the dollar does lose its position as the global reserve currency, it will be catastrophic for the American economy.
Despite all of the supposed safeguards to prevent bank failures, banks still fail. Perhaps the so-called safeguards are causing much of the trouble.
While progressive lawmakers blame the current banking crisis on regulatory issues, the Fed's easy money policies have been the real problem.