Yellen Says Fed Can Bring Down Inflation Without Causing Recession (yahoo.com) 100
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said that she believes the Federal Reserve can bring down inflation without causing a recession because of a strong U.S. job market and household balance sheets, low debt costs and a strong banking sector. From a report: Yellen told a U.S. House of Representatives Financial Services Committee hearing on Thursday that "all of those things suggest that the Fed has a path to bring down inflation without causing a recession, and I know it will be their objective to try to accomplish that."
s / inflation / stock market / (Score:2)
Fixed it for you.
Re:s / inflation / stock market / (Score:5, Funny)
Two weeks to flatten the GDP.
Mission accomplished!
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For a moment I read that as "Two weeks to flatten the GOP" and I was wondering whether Trump returned?
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Sounds like Trump derangement syndrome, not gonna lie
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This not original, by the way. https://brownstone.org/article... [brownstone.org]
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There are a bunch of ways our government can bring down the stock market. For example, a hot war between NATO and Russia would really disrupt the speculators and you'd see huge sell offs.
It's something out of the hands of Wall Street and Joe the Plumber and entirely in the hands of the people we elected and the people they appointed. Not that an appointment such as U.S. Treasury Secretary has any control or perspective over the current cause of inflation and our ramp up (down?) to recession.
What else would they say? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Largely, recessions are the self-fulfilling beliefs of the populace. So, regardless of their personal expectations, what else would the Treasury Secretary say?
This? [youtube.com]
The reactions being taken (Score:4, Insightful)
Basically as always the burden falls on the backs of the middle class and the poor. We could of course get inflation under control by constraining the money supply at the top, but somehow nobody ever talks about that as a solution.
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Sorry, but raising interest rates IS "constraining the money supply at the top". That is literally what it accomplishes: by charging big banks more when they lend out too much to meet reserve requirements, those big banks lend less money so there is less money in the money supply. You seem to be complaining about a system while having not the slightest idea how it works. And if the big banks aren't "the top", I don't know what is.
Increasing lending (as a result of lower FED interest rates) can *stimulat
Go watch the latest Some More News video (Score:2)
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You describe the response of the lender, taking less risk in the future because raw materials (federal reserves) are now more expensive. Interest rates affect everyone equally, so the middle-class is constrained too.
In reality, it's less effective at the top because wealthy people have spare cash to pay the increased costs of borrowing (or, unencumbered assets to use as collateral in re-financing). In contrast, the working-class have less disposable income, so the GDP suffers, hence a recession. Since
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We are really really good at airlifting dollars into the economy. We're not good at taxing it out
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From everything I just said, it should be obvious how Keynesian theory can work - government spending on checks mailed to everyone. Of
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Self-fulfilling beliefs? Sure, psychology plays some role in timing economic swings, but there are real fundamentals at play -- businesses, households and governments over-extend themselves. Then, interest rates rise in response, followed by widespread insolvency. These are real economic imbalances, in the real, physical world and they have to be worked through legally to get the resources out from under bankrupt management and reallocated to financially healthy owners. Yellen's remark is purely a political
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> Largely, recessions are the self-fulfilling beliefs of the populace.
If she had said, "Fox News negativism is the biggest threat to a recession", she'd be thrown out by her ear, even though there is some truth in that. Fox loves to scare their audience with doom and gloom, blaming it on Joe. (Other right-leaning news sources echo Fox to save a buck.)
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They could continue to claim it will be transitory, which was the position they held well into absurdity. That being an obvious lie did not stop them from claiming it.
Exactly. Why Janet Yellen has any credibility at this point with respect to statements about inflation is beyond my ken. She and her fellows either didn't see this inflationary trend coming, or they lied about it in the hopes that they could change the psychology of it. Stupid or lying, pick one.
Now they are making more grand pronouncements. Which is it this time - insightful, stupid, or lying?
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Recessions are periods of reduced economic activity.
Economic activity is at an all time high, unemployment is at an all time low, consumer spending is up. These are signs of a boom time. Wages are rising, too - people are jumping to more preferred jobs and leaving shittier jobs.
Times are good and if you let things go, inflation will run rampant because lots of new money will be buying up even more stuff.
There is evidence the supply shortages we see aren't traditional supply shortages - sure there was some d
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The problem is people think of the economy like they may think of their own bank accounts. If I spend less, I can save more, where I then can get something big later. ...
However the economy is about how much money is moving.
Lets just say there is a 10% tax.
I buy something for a Dollar 1.00
With that dollar the guy pays $0.10 in tax, then buys $0.90 of product
Over a bunch of times, for that 1.00 to go back to taxes, it would have purchased about $12.00 worth of goods/services.
If you lower the taxes it would
Er (Score:2)
We could also stop having more money chase fewer goods and services. But that might involve math ...
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Fewer? Last time I checked, our main problem was that we had fewer goods and services because people had no money left to chase tham.
You're too late (Score:5, Insightful)
Raising rates should have started in 2019. A quarter point every quarter. The Fed should also have stopped propping up all those failed private companies through its purchasing program. If those companies need money, they can go to a bank like the rest of us. Finally, those bullshit reports which came out in 2018 - 2020 about low to no inflation should be thrown out because it was quite clear inflation was rising much faster than the 0.1% or whatever lie they were claiming at the time. Anyone in the real world could see prices rising on everything much faster than those fake reports were stating.
But nope, now we have to hear, again, how they'll work hard to not cause a recession because they waited far too long to do anything out of political considerations. If you're not going to do your job, why are you there?
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The stock market and main street are rarely in sync. The stock market is not the economy.
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Interest rates could have been higher in 2019, but they would have been cut back to zero by April 2020.
But, propping up some private companies was absolutely needed when it was initially undertaken. Remember the days of negative oil prices? So many similar issues were very temporary and well within the scope of the Fed and Treasury to address. The real problem was that nobody wanted to end the stimulus around June/July 2020 and push things back to economic normalcy because of the impact on the election. Ha
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I agree. It's amazing how the housing market had record low interest rates during Covid when unemployment was high, and the government was working on printing trillions in relief and stimulus packages. They should have raised rates. Instead, people were borrowing and buying homes at record numbers which just added to the mess.
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Tricky balancing act (Score:2)
> Raising rates should have started in 2019.
But it was hard to know how many and how big the Covid variant waves were going to be. We still don't know if another Big One is in the pipes. Evolution is sneaky.
Shutting down bars, restaurants, vacations, stadiums, etc. kicks the economy pretty hard. Without the stimulus we may have been in a deep recession right now.
To quote Yogi Berra, "It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future." Essentially the US gov't had to make a "best guess" about Co
Clarification [Re:Tricky balancing act] (Score:2)
Re: "Without the stimulus we may have been in a deep recession right now."
Rework: "Without the stimulus or with a premature rate hike, we may have been in a deep recession right now."
Also, it's probably better to risk over-juicing the economy than under-juicing it during a pandemic. Inflation is annoying, Great Depressions are deadly, especially during pandemics.
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You "juice the economy" with public works, not by engorging the stock market. Its hyperinflation is now our inflation
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Public works take roughly a year to ramp up, at least. When the bill passes, assessments have to be done, then plans drawn up and approved by various jurisdictions, all before a single shovel moves. There are some exceptions, but not enough.
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Public works take roughly a year to ramp up...
Still a better use of the money and better chance of lasting results. Various municipal water pipes could use some repair and replacement, drought mitigation out west, road repair, many things to be done and we had the money for it all. Throwing trillions at the stock market is like throwing it in a fire.
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Direct payments to the lower and middle classes are the fastest stimulus. The rich tend to hold onto any new cash. Extending unempl. benefits is one of the quickest.
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Direct payments to the lower and middle classes are the fastest stimulus.
and the briefest. Fixing and extending infrastructure provides long term benefits
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True, but if you wait too long to fix a slump you get similar to 1930's. It's hard to time infrastructure work schedules with the business cycle because it's slow ramp up and slow ramp down.
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Then you don't wait. None of what is happening should be a surprise to anybody.
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The original point was that most infrastructure takes a while to ramp up. There are quicker acting approaches to stimulus. To successfully counter the business cycle, we need quick tools, infrastructure ain't one.
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Yes, that would be true, if the business cycle weren't so predictable. And besides, we shouldn't be so easily affected by the "business cycle", it's just a lot of Wall Street gibberish to get more free money from the fed, money that could be used for infrastructure, but instead is burnt by "inflation"
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> We already needed rate increases before COVID came along
Covid completely changed the economy that such became almost fully moot.
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Prices go up because 1. The money supply increases faster than the units of production output and 2. Supply and demand. Since 2007 until this very day the US government has printed uncounted trillions of dollars under the guise of Qualitative Easing 1 through 4. You cannot print that much money without a concomitant increase in units of product and not have price increases. It cannot be done. Now, you can through government policy, effect supply and demand, for instance increasing the supply of energy.
I call bullshit (Score:1)
> Finally, those bullshit reports which came out in 2018 - 2020 about low to no inflation should be thrown out because it was quite clear inflation was rising much faster than the 0.1% or whatever lie they were claiming at the time. Anyone in the real world could see prices rising on everything much faster than those fake reports were stating.
Sounds like a conspiracy theory and/or poor sample size. Do you have direct evidence of rigged stats? It's possible your particular area was experiencing inflation
There is a better way (Score:1, Flamebait)
Price controls. And punitive taxes on price gougers, like the oil companies, and the futures traders.
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Bareshelves Biden, is that you? Didn't know you frequent /.
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This cartoon should explain it.
https://media.npr.org/assets/i... [npr.org]
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Price controls. And punitive taxes on price gougers, like the oil companies, and the futures traders.
Price controls undercut the central strength of a free market, how do ensure that the price you set is sufficient to make the transaction profitable? At a certain point price controls just create a secondary market at the real price (just look at ticket scalpers).
As for price gougers... that assumes that the majority of businesses knowingly leave money on the table by underpricing, which seems unlikely.
As for the futures traders, I'm not a financial type, but they sound like a useful way for a business to r
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Price controls.
I grew up in the former Soviet Union. Government-imposed price controls is not the solution you think it is.
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She knows you'll believe anything (Score:1, Insightful)
"There's no inflation"
"Inflation is transitory"
"Inflation is still transitory"
"Inflation is actually good for the economy"
etc.
Wake up! If this was your financial adviser, you would have fired them long ago.
Anyone not trying to remove this person from power is either Charlie Brown trying to kick the football YET AGAIN or in on it.
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Inflation is great for the economy. People have to bring a credit card to buy groceries, and run their transactions in two stages because of limits at the gas station's terminal. When working class people start defaulting on their mountain of debt we'll see just how "good" inflation and recession has been.
The "good" thing about inflation is you can increase minimum wage without actually paying anyone more. Those who keep their money in a bank account or a low yield retirement account are the ones who lose t
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A little bit of inflation is actually good. As long as it doesn't get out of hand, it gives people an incentive to spend their money instead of hoarding it.
The main problem is that people instead put their money into "investments", i.e. they park it in various goods, mostly real estates. That's a problem.
The solution to this would be if the people who have lots of money and would like to invest that have projects they could invest it in. That in turn, though, requires everyone to have at least a little mone
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If you are intending to quote, do it right. Not like mouth-head cable pundits.
Control Theory (Score:2)
One thing I am happy about right now is, until recently, the Fed's control authority was used up. Interest rates were near zero. There was not much they could do to stimulate the economy.
The risk is, while trying to control inflation, they may overshoot the target, and cause a spike in unemployment. It's a slow responding system, but inflation is pretty
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As I said above, they're too late. The Fed kept rates at artifically low numbers for too long and are now trying to play catch up. Which will fail. Always has, always will. Whatever the Fed does now won't show until next year.
She's right (Score:1)
TL;DW, reducing inflation means reducing the money supply, and right now whenever we need to do that we attack the middle class and poor when we could just tax the rich instead.
It's like an MMO. When World of Warcraft has inflation they release a cool new mount for 1000 gold and it sucks all the money out of the whales. But if they ran their economy like we do in the real world they'd shut down all the dungeons and mob
$40 Billions to EVERYBODY (Score:4, Insightful)
Look this is really so simple. This one trick will solve poverty forever, eliminate structural racism in a single blow, and make us all fabulously, insanely rich at the same time! What's not to love?!
Just give $40B to everybody. Instant wealth.
You can thank me later.
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I voted for Gary. Fuck off. You are the problem. You always were. Racist fuck.
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Yeah right (Score:3)
They over reacted on throwing gas on the fire. If you throw gas on a fire, things get out of control. The economy is like that now. I don't think the fed knows what they are doing and they are trying to cover their butts
Capt. Hindsight (Score:1)
Virus evolution is not linear. Nobody has a fucking crystal ball, except maybe in their head.
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Inflation was sub-par until well into the pandemic.
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Another important lesson is that the more labor components a product has, the less likely the price will ever come down. Commodities can come down significantly if supply is increased. This is why we need to attack inflation aggressively as soon as possible. The Fed is compounding their error of over
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Maybe except for me, I was furious when they handed it checks because I knew it would devalue money and lead to inflation. I thought the third round of stimulus was unnecessary. Plus the government created that problem in the first place with lockdowns instead of letting people decide what they wanted to do.
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Whether the lockdowns were "justified" is a different issue. (Perhaps just as tricky as predicting the future of the economy.)
Nothing was actually said. Great politician. (Score:5, Insightful)
"America is strong, we can reduce inflation".
That sums up her statements, which did not even elude to a plan or explain why she thinks the value of the American dollar will go up. Just a pow-wow fluff statement.
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That's true. On the other hand, the situation is not as bad as it might be. I'm about to return to the US from a business trip to Australia, and the Australian dollar is now $0.68 US. When I got here on Monday, $1 AU was $0.71 US. A month ago, it was $0.75, and a year ago it was $0.78.
Over the last year, the euro has dropped from $1.22 to $1.03, the pound from $1.42 to $1.22, and so on. US inflation is high, but the dollar is strong against foreign currencies, so international markets still see it as h
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They don't know what's going on they've already admitted that. The worst is yet to come, the best model that I think anyone could find is probably Japan. They've gone into a decade of stagflation where they can't raise interest rates or they'll kill the economy. We are next
And monkeys ‘can’ fly out of my butt. (Score:2)
Raising Rates Cools What? (Score:3)
But even if this is supposed to cool interbank lending, how does that help the high-finance folks? Perhaps this is to prevent the easy money available to investment buyers so that over-valued companies will be market corrected. that's gonna fuck retirements.
The problems I see don't seem to have much to do with an over-hot marketplace of the consumer. More like opportunism in price raising, and also, legitimate scarcity in basic materials causing price to increase. And scarcity in supply chains, importing, lack of domestic capacity and now bonus warfare.
Either way changing leadership will not help. Those screeching about Bidenism or that the Republicans will fix it once their guy is in or Yellen or other leadership related stuff are going to be severely disappointed or y'know denialistic about how a ruling party change will change absolutely nothing. Nothing at all.
Even if any ruling party were to incentivize opening factories locally, or boosting raw material acquisition, it would take years for private plans to get off the ground. Essentially providing no temporary relief from inflation. Plus high interest rates just makes that kind of capital growth more expensive. Tax-code to the rescue?
You're not a Wizard, Janet. (Score:2)
When they save things like this you know there's real trouble coming.
They have the power to borrow and destroy, but not to create. We need creation as the path out and every one of their controls harms it. Mises wrote the thesis on this about a hundred years ago and Information Theory only cemented it.
Slow news day? (Score:1)
Says the shill (Score:2)
Free Market Economy (Score:1)
Truly Orwellian (Score:2)
Boy are we stupid (Score:2)
Yellen was the Chairman of the Federal Reserve who kept the prime lending rate low. We replaced her with Powell who insisted on keeping them low. Now that they ha