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‘Tell America What Should Be Done to Fight Inflation’
Townhall.com ^ | February 2, 2022 | Timothy Nash

Posted on 02/02/2022 7:11:41 AM PST by Kaslin

The following is a recent discussion between U.S. Congresswoman Lisa C. McClain, Northwood University Economics department chair Dr. Dale C. Matcheck and Dr. Timothy G. Nash, director of the McNair Center for the Advancement of Free Enterprise and Entrepreneurship at Northwood University. The conversation centered around recent comments by U.S. Federal Reserve Bank (Fed) chairman, Jerome Powell and how the Federal Reserve intends to bring our nearly 40-year high rate of inflation down to levels prior to 2021.

McClain: It’s great to be here with two of my favorite economists, Northwood University’s Dr. Tim Nash, and Dr. Dale Matcheck, to discuss Federal Reserve monetary policy. Dale let’s start with you defining inflation.

Matcheck: Sure, Lisa, it’s great to be here. Inflation is the decline in a country’s currency purchasing power over a sustained period of time. Inflation is reflected in an increase in the average price level of goods, services, and assets. The best-known yardstick to measure U.S. inflation is the Consumer Price Index or CPI.

McClain: Tim, your and John Hantz’s recent inflation piece in The Detroit News underscored why it’s so important to discuss Milton Friedman when determining the cause of inflation and how to battle it. Especially topical, given our current inflation rate is near a 40-year high as measured by the CPI.

Nash: Thanks, Lisa. Milton Friedman is still important and relevant today, because he was widely regarded as the world’s greatest scholar and historian of U.S. monetary policy. Dr. Friedman famously said, "inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon that is produced only by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than output (goods, services, and/or assets).” If Dr. Friedman were alive, he’d blame our current inflation on the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank’s excessive and recent expansionary monetary policy over the last four years. I believe Friedman’s cure for our current inflation rests with the Fed and its ability to control and reverse its recent expansionary monetary policy.

Matcheck: Friedman was also one of the first economists to point out that “Inflation is taxation without legislation.” As wages and salaries increase to keep up with the cost of living, it pushes people into higher tax brackets even though their standard of living has not increased. The inflation generates extra revenue for the government but reduces taxpayers’ real purchasing power.

Nash: Another way Friedman described inflation was as “the cruelest of all taxes as it is a hidden tax and harms the poor the most." He pointed out “that whether you are paying more to the government or not, as prices go up, consumers, especially those on fixed incomes, suffer reduced purchasing power and are worse off. A secondary effect of inflation is politicians will often blame higher prices resulting from inflation on “greedy” business owners when the root cause is always government monetary policy. In fact, even though businesses are charging more for their goods or services with inflation, their profit margins are often declining, and their business stability is weakened.

McClain: Alright guys, tell America what should be done to fight inflation.

Matcheck: Well, Lisa, while supply chain problems have exacerbated the situation, the root cause of the recent inflationary pressure is too much money in circulation chasing relatively too few goods, services and/or assets, resulting in sustained rising prices. The antidote is for the Federal Reserve to reduce the supply of money relative to output. I agree with Scott Minerd, chief investment officer at Guggenheim partners who recently stated the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank should shift its focus from controlling interest rates to reducing the size of its balance sheet. Minerd’s diagnosis follows Friedman’s logic about inflation. The reason our money supply has increased is that the Fed’s balance sheet is now at $8.7 trillion, more than doubling over the last four years. This rapid increase was caused by the Fed’s purchases of U.S. government securities ranging from treasury bills to mortgage-backed securities, which it pays banks for with existing or newly created dollars. The banks then inject that money into the economy via loans and other forms of investment. Conversely, the U.S. money supply shrinks when the Fed sells securities to banks. That’s what the Fed needs to do now.

McClain: Tim, do you agree with Dale?

Nash: Absolutely. I’d even go a little bit further by stating the Federal Reserve should let the market determine interest rates and have the Fed concentrate on shrinking its balance sheet. I have faith in the market to determine interest rates. It is important that the Fed act now as preliminary data for fourth quarter 2021 US GDP came out at the end of January with U.S. GDP up 6.9% for the fourth quarter of 2021, much higher than the 5.5% most economists were expecting, and up substantially from 2.3% growth in Q3 2021.

Even with impressive fourth quarter growth, the Fed has decided to continue to buy bonds and expand its massive balance sheet which could be $9 trillion by the time the Fed meets again in March.

It’s difficult to justify the Fed keeping interest rates at zero, buying bonds and growing its balance sheet for at least another six weeks, while expecting inflation will not rise above 7%. With the economy strong, the Fed should act now to battle inflation by contracting its balance sheet. Unfortunately, it may be too late for the Fed to get inflation under control while avoiding a recession in late 2022 or early 2023.

Matcheck: My chief concern, as Dr. Friedman taught us, is that when inflationary expectations take hold in an economy, it makes the Fed’s job that much harder when it finally acts. In fact, late in his career, Dr. Friedman suggested the Fed should target inflationary expectations directly using the TIPS spread. The TIPS spread is the difference between interest rates on inflation indexed bonds and regular bonds. Prior to the pandemic, it was around 1.67%. It was almost double that by last November. That’s a sign inflationary expectations are on the rise. The longer the Fed waits, the harder it will be to bring those under control.

Nash: I agree with Dr. Matcheck and recommend an article Scott Minerd recently wrote that Dale and I reviewed entitled “Forget Raising Rates, Shrink the Balance Sheet.” Minerd strongly supports allowing the market to determine interest rates with the Federal Reserve focusing on contracting its balance sheet. He aligns what is happening now to other U.S. inflationary periods, and points to successful policies used by then-Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volker to combat inflation in the 1970s and early 1980s. While Volker’s actions were too late to avoid the U.S. recessions of the early 1980s, the good news is that it was short and the economic growth that followed was one of the most impressive expansions in U.S. history. Let’s hope the Fed makes the right decisions, acts quickly, and that it’s not too late.

McClain: Gentlemen, thank you for your insights. I will share these with my constituents and Americans in general. Hopefully, the Federal Reserve heeds your advice and that of Mr. Minerd. Equally important is that we better manage the size and scope of government. Inflationary monetary policy should not be used to finance government, but rather be reserved to surgically deal with a rare and extraordinary crisis, such as our current pandemic.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: economy; federalreserve; inflation

1 posted on 02/02/2022 7:11:41 AM PST by Kaslin
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: Kaslin

Inflation is caused by the government issuing dollars - breathing them into existence. The only way to stop it is to stop creating currency.


3 posted on 02/02/2022 7:16:07 AM PST by I want the USA back (Government is to be feared much more than the chicom virus.)
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To: Kaslin
\‘Tell America What Should Be Done to Fight Inflation’

Impeach and remove the ChiComjoe kakistocracy and don't elect Demonicrats an RINOcrats to Congress!! Better still, overturn the 2020 fraudulent Electoral College results and have an Electoral College election with honestly elected electoral delegates.

4 posted on 02/02/2022 7:18:13 AM PST by Carl Vehse (A proud member of the LGBFJB community)
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To: Kaslin
I would add, revitalize the energy sector.


5 posted on 02/02/2022 7:19:17 AM PST by nathanbedford (Attack, repeat, attack! - Bull Halsey)
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To: Kaslin
‘Tell America What Should Be Done to Fight Inflation’

Be happy to.

1) Kick the Imposter in Chief out on his kiester.

2) Reinstate Trump as the duly elected President of the U.S.

3) States and People, start exercising your constitutional independence from the feds both financially and politically.

4) REINSTATE the Constitution as the SUPREME LAW OF THE LAND over the feds and DISMANTLE the 80%+ unconstitutional portion of the federal government including MOST bureaucracies.

5) RESTORE OUR FREE CONSTITUTIONAL REPUBLIC!!!!

There is only ONE REASON for inflation: government printing more dollars than the GDP. CUT GOVERNMENT DOWN TO ITS CONSTITUTIONAL SIZE, and government spending, inflation, and taxes will not be much of an issue.

Next.

6 posted on 02/02/2022 7:26:10 AM PST by Jim W N (MAGA by restoring the Gospel of the Grace of Christ (Jude 3) and our Free Constitutional Republic!)
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To: I want the USA back

Bingo.


7 posted on 02/02/2022 7:27:38 AM PST by Mr. Lucky
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To: Jim W N

“..There is only ONE REASON for inflation: government printing more dollars than the GDP. CUT GOVERNMENT DOWN TO ITS CONSTITUTIONAL SIZE, and government spending, inflation, and taxes will not be much of an issue....”

^THIS^
The UniParty bassturds are addicted to power, greed and our tax dollars.


8 posted on 02/02/2022 7:31:20 AM PST by lgjhn23 (Pray for America....)
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To: Kaslin

open up drilling, complete pipelines, stop handing out free money and forgiving student debt, make it illegal for companies to fire someone who chooses not to be vaccinated, build more ports, build more power plants, allow more lumbering on public lands, break up the liberal tech monopolies to encourage price competition, tell Canada to stop messing with our truckers or else, etc.

This would be a good start.


9 posted on 02/02/2022 7:34:06 AM PST by TexasFreeper2009
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To: Kaslin

10 posted on 02/02/2022 7:36:16 AM PST by stars & stripes forever ( Blessed is the nation whose GOD is the LORD. ~ Psalm 33:12)
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To: Kaslin

The post shows a total lack of understanding of economics in the real world.

The rise in inflation started when?

It started with the destruction of the Keystone Pipeline.

The cancellation of the oil leases and the attempt to manipulate the economy with “free” money were gasoline poured on the fire.

A growing economy must have cheap energy.

Nothing happens without energy. Steel ore is in the ground. It stays there until energy is applied to it.

Crops are planted in only one way,,,the application of energy. The manufacture of fertilizer, soil preparation, weed control, harvesting and shipments to markets all require energy. Without that energy nothing happens.

You can apply the same test to the building of a house. Each and every step in the manufacture of the various components requires massive amounts of energy.

The energy required in each step has a cost. If there are 1,000 steps required the rise in energy costs is added 1,000 times in the finished product.

In short, without energy, we are no better than the naked savage in the jungle, eating berries or each other.


11 posted on 02/02/2022 7:46:08 AM PST by old curmudgeon (There is no situation so bad that the federal government can not make worse.)
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To: Kaslin

12 posted on 02/02/2022 8:30:26 AM PST by lewislynn (Fox news: the most irrelevant after the fact useless news source...Fake news? try NO news)
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To: Kaslin

Stop the invasion of foreign freeloaders coming across our borders to clean the shelves at Walmart and soak up our gasoline to put in their junkers. Those are not the problem of American taxpayers. They should stay home and demand that the government of the flag they are waving as they march into America, give them the free sh*t want. America is not a pinata.


13 posted on 02/02/2022 8:35:46 AM PST by FlingWingFlyer (You can vote your way into socialism but you have to shoot your way out of it.)
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To: Levy78

Shooting commies is the best way to avoid inflation.

Won't that drive up the price of guns and ammo? /s

14 posted on 02/02/2022 9:22:31 AM PST by FormerFRLurker
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To: Kaslin

Stop government overspending.

Stop printing money like it’s the Weimar Republic part II.

KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid).


15 posted on 02/02/2022 9:23:24 AM PST by FormerFRLurker
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To: Kaslin

If an honest election was held none of this chaos would be happening.


16 posted on 02/02/2022 9:43:31 AM PST by Vaduz ( )
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To: I want the USA back

Agreed! But also get Govt. out of the way of the creation of capital. One such example is the shutting down of the pipeline. Thousands of jobs lost. And, shortly after the inflation rate skyrocketed.


17 posted on 02/02/2022 9:53:18 AM PST by Parmy
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