if you say so Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kidhe has a creestal globe. so he aught to know so.
..."WTF Happened in 1971?"... Originally Posted by CaptainMidnightWhile not necessarily a fan of Politico, the below article caught my attention. Starts out as a love fest of the guy, but in my mind he seems to echo my fears of coming inflation and the havoc that may well ensue as a result. Especially considering some recent FED remarks along the lines of: dang, that inflation thing might actually exist and be a tough and sticky booger.
Could someone please explain to me what bambino just posted! Originally Posted by WTF
He answered "no," so maybe Bambino is still waiting on his daily dose of missives from "Q."
Apparently the link he posted takes you to something produced by the "Christian Patriots."
That group might be a good fit for you when you decide that the brand of lunacy served up by Sidney Powell and Lin Wood just isn't quite amped-up enough to suit your tastes! Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight
And what are your daily doses of missives? From where? The whole system is corrupt. And you’re arrogant enough to think you know what’s going on. You don’t. Originally Posted by bambinoWay to go, Bambi! Yes this line of argument will go well for you. Nothing like being hectored on "what's going on in the world" by the forum's most prolific conspiracy-monger!
Can't wait for next up! The most formidable lawyer ever to come out of Texas versus the Harvard divinity student Originally Posted by Tiny(Should the next "next up" be discussion of whether ending gold convertibility was a good (or forced!) thing, or whether Jimmy Carter(!) undertook bold anti-Soviet action during the Cold War?)
While not necessarily a fan of Politico, the below article caught my attention. Starts out as a love fest of the guy, but in my mind he seems to echo my fears of coming inflation and the havoc that may well ensue as a result. Especially considering some recent FED remarks along the lines of: dang, that inflation thing might actually exist and be a tough and sticky booger.(In some respects, I think your post title "Are we the frog in boiling water?" may be fully apt, given the current circumstances!)
The Fed’s Doomsday Prophet Has a Dire Warning About Where We’re Headed
...While Hoenig was concerned about inflation, that isn’t what solely what drove him to lodge his string of dissents. The historical record shows that Hoenig was worried primarily that the Fed was taking a risky path that would deepen income inequality, stoke dangerous asset bubbles and enrich the biggest banks over everyone else. He also warned that it would suck the Fed into a money-printing quagmire that the central bank would not be able to escape without destabilizing the entire financial system...
...As a bank examiner, Hoenig realized another very important thing. Easy money policies don’t just drive up the price of consumer goods, like bread and cars. The money also drives up price of assets like stocks, bonds and real estate. During the 1970s, low interest rates fueled demand for assets, which eventually inflated asset bubbles across the Midwest, including in heavy farming states, such as Kansas and Nebraska, and in the energy-producing state of Oklahoma. When asset prices like this rise quickly, it creates that dreaded thing called an asset bubble...
...“There is no painless solution,” Hoenig said in a recent interview. “It’s going to be difficult. And the longer you wait the more painful it will end up being.”...
Maybe Yogi Berra was right after all; It's like deja vu all over again.
Originally Posted by Why_Yes_I_Do
(Should the next "next up" be discussion of whether ending gold convertibility was a good (or forced!) thing, or whether Jimmy Carter(!) undertook bold anti-Soviet action during the Cold War?)I read Stockman's book, the Triumph of Politics, but it's been a long time. I recall that, as you say, there was little support in Congress to control spending, despite the convictions of Reagan. And Reagan himself had no desire to prune the defense budget. Very interesting, the part about James Baker in your post.
My take on why the Reagan record did not match the rhetoric:
(For those not familiar with his background, the "Harvard divinity student" Tiny referred to here is David Stockman.)
When Reagan entered the Oval Office in 1981, conservatives expected a golden age of tax reductions and cuts in the size, scope, and cost of government. Although the first part occurred soon enough, the second never even came close to materializing.
For his first-term chief of staff, Reagan hired Jim Baker, an imposing Texan with a rather forceful personality. Having long been the George H.W. Bush consigliere, he was the furthest thing from a "movement conservative." Rather, he viewed himself as a practitioner of "realpolitik."
To that end, he very well may have thought that "his man's" best interests might be served by growing government in the same fashion that Nixon called for during his 1971 state of the union speech, in which he pushed congress to pass an expanded "full employment" budget. After all, Baker was an active party fund raiser at that time. (And many thought "his man" was actually GHWB, although of course the interests of the president and VP were in most respects congruent.)
Stockman had different ideas, needless to say. As a true-blue conservative/libertarian, he had visions of trimming back the New Deal and Great Society to the maximum extent practicable.
But it was not to be. Baker and Stockman had heated words from time to time, and the former always prevailed. Reagan had given him pretty much of a free hand, and he ran the White House with an iron fist.
Concerning real rollbacks in the growth of government spending (let alone actual cuts!), very few Republicans in the House were firmly on board (and no Democrats at all).
So government spending grew unabated during the Reagan era. And not just defense spending, in fact.
(Most of the above is from a draft copy for a blog post I wrote in 2007.)
. Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight
"Trickle-Down Economics, Version 2.0. Now Much Bigger and Stronger Than the Original"Well, they hurt people who rely on interest income for retirement. And help those who invest in real estate, shares, businesses and the like, who tend to be wealthier than many Americans who are living paycheck-to-paycheck.
Wouldn't interest rate suppression and multiple iterations of quantitative easing fit that description fairly closely?
. Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight
As to gold convertibility or Carter and the Ruskies, I vote for gold! That's because (a) it's a more interesting topic, and (b) whatever you have to say about "Jimmy" (as my grandfather, a native Georgian, used to fondly call him), is going to buttress WTF's case in our argument about Reagan. Originally Posted by TinyMaybe I'll come back later and see if I can buttress one of WTF's statements, but since you "voted" for gold, here's my take.
One point to ponder here, though, might be this:
Asset inflation vs. consumer price inflation.
I've mentioned before that the term "trickle-down economics" might not be an apt way to describe what didn't actually happen during the Reagan years (but may have been intended by some talkers and writers back in the 1970s).
How about this?
"Trickle-Down Economics, Version 2.0. Now Much Bigger and Stronger Than the Original" Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight
Well, they hurt people who rely on interest income for retirement. And help those who invest in real estate, shares, businesses and the like, who tend to be wealthier than many Americans who are living paycheck-to-paycheck. Originally Posted by TinyFor sure!
While not necessarily a fan of Politico, the below article caught my attention. Starts out as a love fest of the guy, but in my mind he seems to echo my fears of coming inflation and the havoc that may well ensue as a result. Especially considering some recent FED remarks along the lines of: dang, that inflation thing might actually exist and be a tough and sticky booger.
The Fed’s Doomsday Prophet Has a Dire Warning About Where We’re Headed Originally Posted by Why_Yes_I_Do
There was quite a bit of talk for a couple of weeks about the excellent Politico piece that Why Yes I Do posted above. For some time, Hoenig was the lone dissenter at the Fed. It was widely believed then, and still is now, that he was more concerned with asset bubbles creating chaos, risks, and vastly increased inequality than in consumer price inflation.I just read the Politico article, and it is indeed excellent.
He was a lonely voice in the wilderness, though. Now our bubble-ridden economy has been so heavily medicated and stimulated for so long that there's no pain-free way out.
. Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight