Several years ago I predicted that the U.S. would ultimately be confronted with the debilitating economic conundrum of stagflation, something which the nation had not seen since the 1970s. I suggested that stagflation would become a household word again and that the majority of American concerns would revolve around rising prices coupled with stagnant wages and falling production.
In 2018 in my article Stagflationary Crisis: U.S.A.’s Ongoing Collapse, Understanding the Cause, I noted:
Years ago there was a rather idiotic battle between financial analysts over what the end result of the Fed’s massive stimulus measures would be. One side argued that deflation would be the outcome and that no amount of Fed printing would overtake the vast black hole of debt conjured by the derivatives implosion. The other side argued that the Fed would continue to print perpetually, resorting to QE4 or possibly “QE infinity” and negative interest rates as a means to stave off a market crash for decades (like Japan) while at the same time initiating a Weimar-style inflationary bonanza.
Both sides were wrong because they refused to acknowledge the third option – stagflation.
The process of stagflation is difficult to track because there are multiple paths that it can take, many of them largely dependent on the whims of the central bank and its policy decisions. All we can really do is look back at the limited number of historic examples simply and guess what will happen next. In the 1970s stagflation nearly crushed the country, with inflation rising by 7% to over 14% per year for a decade.
When I hear Zennials complain about being born into the “worst economy ever,” I have to laugh because they really have no clue. The 1970s was far worse in terms of erosion of buying power as well as overall poverty. If you look at film footage and photos of urban areas from Los Angeles to New York to Philadelphia during that time, many parts of these cities looked like bombed-out war zones.
The country was truly on the edge of disaster.
In the early 1980s, under Paul Volcker’s leadership the Federal Reserve jacked interest rates up to over 20%. This stopped the inflation crisis but triggered a deflationary plunge that would sit like a giant boulder on the chest of the American consumer and small business owners for years to come. My own grandfather lost millions in his trucking and freight company during the rate spike; many people lost their businesses and homes.
In other words, as bad as the situation is now, we haven’t seen anything yet. Of course, we are quickly moving towards similar conditions and there is one thing we have today that the 1970s didn’t: A massive (and growing) national debt.
Currently, the U.S. national debt is $33.8 trillion and has a 120% debt-to-GDP ratio. In a single month, October 2023, the federal government added over $600 billion to the debt. At the current pace the total debt will breach $41 trillion in one year.
The speed of this accumulation is frightening. To put this in perspective, the Obama administration and the Federal Reserve added around $9 trillion to the debt in eight years with the corporate bailout spree of the Great Financial Crisis. Compared to the Biden administration, Obama’s spending looks absolutely miserly.
How is this possible?
As I have noted in the past, the U.S. economy rests on a foundation of intrinsically worthless currency – and so much debt that the slightest rise in interest rates causes huge ripple effects.
The 20% interest rate level of the early 1980s? Yes, it was worrisome, and led to not one but two grueling recessions. After 200 years of existence, the U.S. ended the decade of the 80s with just under $3 trillion in debt.
Today? Well, for comparison purposes, the Biden administration’s 2021 budget added $2.77 trillion to the national debt. In ONE YEAR! For comparison purposes, from 1776-1989, the federal government accumulated about $2.77 trillion in debt.
It’s impossible to overstate this point: The Biden regime saddled the nation with over 200 years’ worth of debt in just one year.
Today, the U.S. government regularly borrows money just to make interest payments. The Treasury department also writes new IOUs to fund old IOUs that come due. Finally, the government borrows still more to fund all spending which exceeds tax collection (this is “deficit spending,” which increases the national debt – sometimes the two are conflated).
At higher interest-rate levels, borrowing enters a destructive spiral. There’s interest payments on debt, which was itself borrowed to make interest payments on debt. To put it in simple terms, it’s a bit like a broke person taking on a stack of new credit cards to make the interest payments on a stack of old credit cards. It’s financial suicide.
Eventually the avalanche of debt will stall inflation but it will also wreak havoc across the economy and trigger a deflationary crisis.
We’re seeing the beginning already… The crash across manufacturing and industrial sectors. Frozen wages. Layoffs and bankruptcies piling up in the freight sector.
These are all clear indicators of impending recession. Meanwhile, U.S. home sales have plunged to a 13 year low as prices continue to rise.
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