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by spicyusername 1462 days ago
> Inflation is at 40 year highs, gas is over $5 a gallon,

As far as I'm aware, it's generally accepted by economists that these things are not caused by either the FED or the Biden administration, but by:

- supply-side disruption caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, China's zero-covid policies, and general supply chain chaos following the pandemic

- demand-side disruption caused by a strong U.S. labor market and pent-up post-pandemic spending

When you have more demand than supply, prices go up.

> on the verge of a major recession.

This _is_ caused by the FED, on purpose, to fix the inflation problem by driving down demand. The FED only controls the demand-side of the equation, so it'll be interesting to see what happens when supply-side issues start to ameliorate.

2 comments

All false. Every trading/investing website worth its salt could see inflation coming. They've been exhorting people to invest in oil and natural gas since 2020. Those two are the biggest drivers in inflation. The commodity index as well was in a bullish pattern, which is sadly very inflationary.

We can go around about what caused what but the fact is that inflation has been coming since rates dropped to 0 and there was nowhere for them to go but up.

That’s because that’s what sells. That’s what people want to hear. It’s dramatic.

After being in the trading community for year and years pretty much any trader will tell you it’s filled with pseudo economics and strategies that are not designed to make you smarter or earn you money but rather earn the person “selling the shovel” money. Gold bugs, perma bears, Austrian economics, and armchair experts are notably present in trading circles.

Don’t trust traders or investors on economics. Trust actual economists. I’m not an economist but I’d point to Japan as a counter example. They literally invented QE yet they could barely move the needle on inflation until the recent supply/demand shocks.

Note that I mentioned NG and Oil and commodities as drivers of inflation, not QE.
What? Lots of people (probably the Wall Street Joirnal chief among them) have been yelling since the early days of the pandemic that the enormity of stimulus and lockdowns are going to drive an inflationary disaster. As it turns out shutting down small businesses and giving everyone trillions in free money causes the value of money to drop - who knew?

How you absolve the fed and administration of all accountability here is beyond me.

> enormity of stimulus

I agree that, with benefit of hindsight, there is room to nitpick the sizing of the pandemic stimulus, but remember, at the time nobody knew how long the pandemic was going to last and how deflationary the the collapse of spending was going to be.

I do think that the link between current levels of inflation and stimulus spending is weak. At best maybe _some_ of the current issues with inflation are caused by pandemic stimulus (which is already captured in my "post-pandemic pent-up demand" bullet anyways). I'll leave the verdict on that link for the economics post-docs to write about over the next decade.

> out shutting down small businesses

How did the FED or the Biden administration "shut down small businesses"? It seemed to me like the intent of the pandemic stimulus was exactly to prevent this?

Lockdowns shut down small businesses, not stimulus.

Debt-to-GDP ratio skyrocketed by 30% over the pandemic, the fastest increase since the great depression. We have never taken on so much debt and given it for free to so many people.

Stimulus playing a small part in inflation? Every single person who opposed stimulus warned about this.