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Economy |
Major Economic Contraction Coming In 2023 – Followed By Even More Inflation |
2022-12-09 |
I remember in 2007 right before the epic derivatives collapse when media pundits were applauding the US housing market and predicting even greater highs in sales and in valuations. I had only been writing economic analysis for about a year, but I remember thinking that the overt display of optimism felt like compensation for something. It seemed as if they were trying to pull the wool over the eyes of the public in the hopes that if people just believed hard enough that all was well then the fantasy could be manifested into reality. Unfortunately, that’s not how economics works. Supply and demand, debt and deficit, money velocity and inflation; these things cannot be ignored. If the system is out of balance, collapse will set its ugly foot down somewhere and there’s nothing anyone including central banks can do about it. In fact, there are times when they deliberately ENGINEER collapse. This is the situation we are currently in today as 2022 comes to a close. The Fed is in the midst of a rather aggressive rate hike program in a "fight" against the stagflationary crisis that they created through years of fiat stimulus measures. The problem is that the higher interest rates are not bringing prices down, nor are they really slowing stock market speculation. Easy money has been too entrenched for far too long, which means a hard landing is the most likely scenario. In the early 2000s the Fed had been engaged in artificially low interest rates which inflated the housing and derivatives bubble. In 2004, they shifted into a tightening process. Rates in 2004 were at 1% and by 2006 they rose to over 5%. This is when cracks began to appear in the credit structure, with 4.5% — 5.5% being the magic cutoff point before debt became too expensive for the system to continue the charade. By 2007/2008 the nation witnessed an exponential implosion of credit, setting off the biggest money printing bonanza in US history in order to save the banking sector, at least for a time. Since nothing was actually fixed by the Fed back then, I will continue to use the 5% funds rate as a marker for when we will see another major contraction. The difference this time is that the central bank does not have the option to flood the economy with more fiat, at least not without immediately triggering a larger stagflationary spiral. I am also operating on the premise that the Fed WANTS a crash at this time. |
Posted by:Besoeker |
#11 |
Posted by: Besoeker 2022-12-09 17:43 |
#10 Just got a haircut; can’t afford tires till payday….. |
Posted by: USN, Ret. 2022-12-09 17:16 |
#9 Just bought a couple tires. My hair almost fell out. |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2022-12-09 16:53 |
#8 My Health Insurance going up 20%. Yea! |
Posted by: swksvolFF 2022-12-09 16:46 |
#7 ^ On a roll today... |
Posted by: Frank G 2022-12-09 14:25 |
#6 ![]() |
Posted by: Skidmark 2022-12-09 13:44 |
#5 Ref #4: "Ignoring history" Certainly the case regarding endless conflict in Afrika and the Hindu Kush |
Posted by: Besoeker 2022-12-09 09:01 |
#4 Our economic academics, Fed, and Treasury geniuses chose to ignore history. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2022-12-09 08:46 |
#3 You can't be in an environment eyeball deep in printed money, and not be corrupt. |
Posted by: badanov 2022-12-09 08:13 |
#2 WW II was not about "recovering" from the Depression. That was a nice knock-on effect of it, though. |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2022-12-09 08:12 |
#1 Looking more and more like 1914 to 1940''s History being repeated. Coming out of a War & a Pandemic, the stock market is BULLY, We have the Roaring "New Generation" 20's, Inflation starts, Banks fold (E-coins), Stock Market crashes, Depression sets in. So who will the DC Swamp go to war with to recover this time? Question: Can we win it, with what little we still can produce in the USA? |
Posted by: NN2N1 2022-12-09 08:07 |