Results 1 to 10 of 54

Thread: Making Sense of the Federal Reserve

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Consumers covered the gap in part by taking on more debt, with outstanding credit balances up 117% since 1999, which may have helped mask the rise in inequality that dominates the headlines today - and which has been brought to the fore by the inflation in credit engineered by monetary authorities.

    Populism Surfs a Wave of Inflation By Chris Maloney of Bloomberg

    The rise of populism in America is a byproduct of inflationary policies that have helped trigger a dramatic increase in consumer debt, declining real wages and rising prices for food and housing since 1999.

    From 2000-2014, housing prices have risen 73% and rents were up 45%; the cost of putting food on the table rose 47%, and college costs increased 137%

    Over the same period nominal real household mean incomes rose just 38% while declining 3% in real terms.

    This is no surprise as the working class and poor get any newly created money and credit last and hence “will find themselves compelled to pay higher prices for the things they buy, which means that they will be obliged to get along on a lower standard of living,” a point made by Hazlitt in his "Economics in One Lesson’’ (p.153).
    "And if I could I surely would Stand on the rock that Moses stood"

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by Chex View Post
    Consumers covered the gap in part by taking on more debt, with outstanding credit balances up 117% since 1999, which may have helped mask the rise in inequality that dominates the headlines today - and which has been brought to the fore by the inflation in credit engineered by monetary authorities.

    Populism Surfs a Wave of Inflation By Chris Maloney of Bloomberg

    The rise of populism in America is a byproduct of inflationary policies that have helped trigger a dramatic increase in consumer debt, declining real wages and rising prices for food and housing since 1999.

    From 2000-2014, housing prices have risen 73% and rents were up 45%; the cost of putting food on the table rose 47%, and college costs increased 137%

    Over the same period nominal real household mean incomes rose just 38% while declining 3% in real terms.

    This is no surprise as the working class and poor get any newly created money and credit last and hence “will find themselves compelled to pay higher prices for the things they buy, which means that they will be obliged to get along on a lower standard of living,” a point made by Hazlitt in his "Economics in One Lesson’’ (p.153).

    Thank you Chex!


    That is very amusing to me that Populism, based in SDR's supporting currencies, founds a new religion. The opening remark of the Gospel of Pragmatism reads:


    Name:  Pragmatism opening remark.jpg
Views: 433
Size:  136.2 KB


    It almost feels as though Populism is the opposite of Pragmatism!

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •