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Milton Friedman Isn’t Running the Show Anymore…Too Bad, Isn’t It?
Townhall.com ^ | April 25, 2022 | Timothy Nash

Posted on 04/25/2022 7:23:47 AM PDT by Kaslin

This piece was co-authored by Mr. James Hop and Mr. Jared La Rue.

Milton Friedman determined the root cause of inflation to be government monetary policy and famously opined: "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).”

A 1976 Nobel Prize winner in Economics for his pioneering work on monetary policy, inflation, and the business cycle, Friedman established a strong correlation between excessive government spending and monetary policy, its over-stimulation of the U.S. economy and the economic contractions that followed.

Unfortunately, the Biden Administration has lived by then-candidate Biden’s statements regarding the economics of Dr. Friedman. Recall, in late April 2020, Biden declared in an interview with Politico, “Milton Friedman isn’t running the show anymore.” Even earlier, during a fundraiser in September 2019 Biden asked a group of reporters “When did Milton Friedman die and become king.”

In our opinion, it is a shame that the Biden Administration has failed to show knowledge of and respect for the scholarship of Milton Friedman. Current U.S. monetary policy has taken consumer price inflation from 1.4% on an annualized basis in January 2021 when resident Biden took office to 8.5% on an annualized basis at the end of March 2022. If you extrapolate the March monthly consumer inflation rate of 1.2% over 12 months, the yearly consumer inflation rate is 14.4%. Historically, inflation rates at this level have only been brought under control by economic recession or depression.

We believe a small portion of our current 14.4% annualized inflation rate can be attributed to global supply chain bottlenecks and the war in Ukraine. Most of it is directly attributable to the roughly $6.5 trillion the Trump and Biden Administrations spent in the name of COVID relief and the dramatic increase in the U. S. money supply as measured by the expansion of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet (FED). The FEDs balance sheet stood at $0.9 trillion at the end of January 2008, and today is at $9 trillion at the end of March 2022.

Recent fiscal and monetary policy, along with the following five predictive indicators lead us to believe a recession is on the horizon for the U.S. economy over the next 12 to 18 months.

1. Inverted Yield Curve

Since 1955, an inverted yield curve preceded every recession, except one. Within the last month, the two-year treasury rate inverted to the ten-year treasury rate, while the five-year treasury rate inverted to the 30-year treasury rate. The FED is raising short-term interest rates to curb inflation – a move that could push the country toward recession.

2. The “Rule of 4%”

Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers has argued for more than a year that inflation is non-transitory and is caused largely by excessive government spending and expansionary monetary policy. Summers also proved that since 1945 when the U.S. Consumer Inflation Rate rises above 4% and the U.S. Unemployment Rate falls below 4%, the over-stimulation of the U.S. economy results and leads to a recession within two years. The “Rule of 4%” recently took place when the U.S. Unemployment Rate dipped below 4% in December 2021 with inflation above 4% simultaneously.

3. Used Car Prices as a leading indicator of recession

Former U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan argued falling U.S. used car prices would directly or shortly thereafter be accompanied by reduced sales of used cars. He noted this correlation would take place when inflation increased at a faster pace than wages resulting in a decline in real incomes leaving consumers with reduced purchasing power. A slowing economy follows leading to a recession or depression. Prior to March, U.S. used car prices were up roughly 40% on an annualized basis. However, in March 2022, used car prices were down 3.8% according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, while sales of used cars less than 10 years old were down 27% when compared to March 2021. Buyers of used cars are now taking 171 days to shop compared with 89 days in March 2021.

The recent FED policy change to raising interest rates will have multiple impacts on the economy. Higher interest rates should slow down the economy as the cost of financing homes, automobiles and other large ticket items will be more costly. This is evident as noted in the slowing of used car sales and the sharp increase in mortgage rates from below 3% for 30-year mortgages in late 2021 to reaching 5.11% on April 21st.

4. Real Wages and Corporate Earnings

In the recently released March Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, nominal wages were up an impressive 5.6%. However, when discounting for the 8.5% overall CPI, real wages for the month were down 2.9%. Declining real wages are a leading indicator of recession. Declining real wages also puts pressure on employers to increase wages which drives corporate earnings down signaling an economy in decline. We believe U. S. corporate earnings will begin to decline in the 2nd or 3rd quarter of 2022 and continue in Q4 2022 and Q1 2023.

5. Losing Voter Confidence

Recent polls show resident Biden is losing voter confidence with polls at historically low levels for a president entering his second year in office. CBS News/YouGOV has resident Biden’s job approval at 42%, Ipsos/Reuters places the president’s job approval at 41%, Heart/NBC and CNBC report the president’s job approval at 38%, while Quinnipiac University calculated the president’s job approval at 33% and his approval handling the economy at 35%. Collectively, the polls show Americans are losing faith in the president and the U.S. economy.

Conclusion

In addition to the above-noted data, the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank’s GDP Now estimator is calling for a GDP growth rate of only 1.3% for the U.S. economy in the first quarter of 2022, which is much more optimistic than Goldman Sachs prediction of only 0.5% growth in Q1 2022. Former Trump Administration chair of the President’s council of economic advisors, Kevin Hassett, using similar analysis to Alan Greenspan’s on declining new and used car sales in March, believes the U.S. economy may already be in recession or certainly heading in that direction. Therefore, we are holding to our earlier prediction that there is a 60% chance the U.S. economy will be in recession by the end of the summer of 2023, if not sooner.

Finally, we believe the American economy would be a much healthier and stable place if Milton Friedman were alive and in charge of the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: federalreserve

1 posted on 04/25/2022 7:23:47 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

No, but the true Laws of Economics and the laws of the wealth-creating Market Free From Government Interference to which Milton Friedman espoused and taught, do run the show as ever.


2 posted on 04/25/2022 7:28:38 AM PDT 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: Kaslin

Friedman was a real economist and got the Nobel prize in economics when it was worth something.

Look at the worthlessness of that prize now and the total intellectual lightweight that received it.


3 posted on 04/25/2022 7:30:48 AM PDT by Da Coyote
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To: Kaslin
Even earlier, during a fundraiser in September 2019 Biden asked a group of reporters “When did Milton Friedman die and become king.”

What an absurd statement. Truth is truth no matter who says it or how long ago it was said. Do the laws of gravity no longer apply because Isaac Newton discovered them a long time ago and is now dead?

4 posted on 04/25/2022 7:30:53 AM PDT by throwthebumsout
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To: Kaslin

I ask all the so called economists and the government finance ministers and bureaucrats “ if you guys are so smart, how come everything is so fcked up?”


5 posted on 04/25/2022 7:35:01 AM PDT by HighSierra5 (The only way you know a commiraspute is lying is when they open their pieholes.p)
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To: Kaslin
Even if we were following Keynesian economics the government would not be spending as much as it currently does.

For Keynes, the government was only supposed to overspend during economic downturns. Our government overspends all the time.

6 posted on 04/25/2022 7:36:44 AM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear (This is not a tagline.)
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To: HighSierra5

Feels like a planned Wipeout of large numbers of people.

...they know what they’re doing.


7 posted on 04/25/2022 8:32:06 AM PDT by fuzzylogic (welfare state = sharing of poor moral choices among everybody)
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To: Kaslin

ping


8 posted on 04/25/2022 7:45:40 PM PDT by WhattheDickens? (Funny, I didn’t think this was 1984…)
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