How the Fed Might Trigger Another Great Depression

From Peter Reagan at Birch Gold Group

How The Fed Might Trigger Another Great Depression

After the most recent FOMC meeting, Chairman Powell issued an official statement explaining the decision to raise interest rates another quarter-point.

That brings the Federal target funding rate to 5.25-5.5%, the highest rate in over two decades. (Granted, those were two decades of perpetual emergency, the lowest-for-longest rates in U.S. history.)

Powell summarized the FOMC decision as follows:

Recent indicators suggest that economic activity has been expanding at a moderate pace. Job gains have been robust in recent months, and the unemployment rate has remained low. Inflation remains elevated.

The Fed’s continuing battle against inflation was started way too late under the mistaken idea it was “transitory.” Towards that end, the recent rate increase was justified by Powell in another statement:

We understand the hardship that high inflation is causing, and we remain strongly committed to bringing inflation back down to our 2% goal. Price stability is the responsibility of the Federal Reserve. Without price stability, the economy doesn’t work for anyone.

He’s right that price stability is a crucial part of a functioning economy.

However, the Fed’s efforts to rein in inflation add stress to another part of the economy that’s already cracking under the strain…

Higher interest rates are good for creditors, but terrible for debtors

The truly wealthy, who have no debts at all – people like Warren Buffett and Bill Gates – don’t need to worry much about interest rates.

Institutions and individuals who require credit, though, including the U.S. government, banks, many businesses and most American households, are running into trouble. Higher interest rates are pushing them to the brink of survival.

Let’s take a look at how the world’s largest debtor, the U.S. government ,is doing. (Source). This graph compares the growth rate for four major economic indicators: GDP and tax revenue (“income”) on the one hand, total federal debt and debt service payments (interest expense) on the other:

Deficit spending increases government debt.

Old debts aren’t paid off – instead, they’re rolled over into new loans. And when interest rates are higher, those new loans become more expensive.

When interest rates were low (for those 20 prior years), the government borrowed massive amounts of money – cheaply.

As though historically low interest rates would last forever.

The borrowing continued – now surpassing $32 trillion. But now, thanks to 5% in rate increases the Fed has initiated since February 2022, the interest expense the government pays has skyrocketed.

This is because, instead of paying off its debts, the government is simply writing new IOUs and paying higher interest rates, rolling over old debts into new:

Since interest rates started rising rapidly in early 2022, the effective federal interest rate has risen by a full percent. Debt over the same period increased by $1.8 trillion, and the interest expense rose by $328 billion. Of the $328 billion, only about $50 billion was due to new debt issuance. The remainder is a function of the Treasury having to fund maturing debt by issuing new debt at higher interest rates than the old debt.

In just the first half of the year, SIFMA calculates the Treasury has issued $9.9 trillion in new debt. At the same time, the federal debt grew by slightly more than $1 trillion. $8.9 trillion of new debt replaced old debt.

That’s right. The vast majority, some 90% of federal debt, isn’t funding the military. It isn’t training new Immigrations & Customs Enforcement officers, or helping the Food and Drug Administration monitor food safety.

It’s simply paying off old debts by taking on new, more expensive debt!

And if you look at the chart again, you’ll see that debt service payments are rising much faster than tax revenue – faster than GDP (which, theoretically, if the government imposed a 100% tax, would represent the entire income of the U.S.)

This looks like a debt trap.

Governments, however, can draw out a bankruptcy for decades, because they have the power to print their own money (and force citizens to use that money).

Businesses, however, can’t print their own money…

A recent New York Times article summarized the potential for a new bankruptcy crisis:

The fear is that as debt comes due and businesses still in need of cash are forced to renew their financing at much higher interest rates, bankruptcies and defaults could accelerate. That risk is especially pronounced if the Fed keeps borrowing costs higher for longer — a possibility investors have slowly come to expect.

Already, corporate defaults this year are running at their fastest pace in more than a decade for companies with public debt that trades on financial markets outstripping the immediate aftereffect of the pandemic’s start in 2020, according to S&P Global Ratings.

Lending and banks are already suffering thanks to higher rates, and another banking crisis could ensue if they continue to rise.

Business Insider reported on the contraction of credit:

Total commercial and industrial (C&I) lending shrank 1% year-to-date, compared with a 9.3% expansion during the same period last year, according to Robin Brooks, chief economist at the Institute of International Finance. The median growth for the comparable periods from 2010 to 2022 was 4.5%, according to him.

It’s not just credit that’s contracting, though – liquidity is down some $500 billion across the banking system.

Tighter credit is bad news for anyone counting on loans to survive. Such as the average American household, which has been borrowing heavily to afford higher prices. Consumer debt recently breached a historic record high.

Of course, consumers will suffer consequences of higher interest rates on credit, which in some cases was being used to combat the inflation that the Fed is fighting.

To summarize:

  • The U.S. government can’t afford higher interest rates
  • Businesses (especially banks) can’t afford higher interest rates
  • Most American households can’t afford higher interest rates

We can be pretty sure, from past experience, that the Fed will prioritize “financial stability” over its inflation fight.

The real question is, which will happen first: a credit crisis bringing on a severe recession? Or a pre-emptive return to quantitative easing and money-printing, fueling another inflationary surge?

One of the two looks extremely likely in the next six months…

Finding stability in an unstable economy

Consider everything we discussed above, it’s no wonder that global de-dollarization is all over the news these days. No one wants to pin their financial future on a bankrupt nation’s rapidly-devaluing currency…

Maybe the only good news is that there’s an asset that can not only diversify your savings, but provide shelter from dollar devaluation: Physical precious metals like gold and silver. There’s a reason gold and silver are the historic safe-haven assets of choice. In addition to being some of the few inflation-resistant investments that are practical for individuals to own, they have a centuries-long track record of preserving purchasing power regardless of economic crisis.

So right now, it might be a good idea to take a few minutes to help yourself by learning about them. You can get all the information you need about both gold and silver for free to make an informed decision right here.

With global tensions spiking, thousands of Americans are moving their IRA or 401(k) into an IRA backed by physical gold. Now, thanks to a little-known IRS Tax Law, you can too. Learn how with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals how physical precious metals can protect your savings, and how to open a Gold IRA. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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14 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
July 31, 2023 9:20 am

[“SHE’S GONNA BLOW!]
Wall Street Silver:
This is not Apple, Nvidia, or Tesla.

It is the US national debt which has grown by $1.3 trillion in the past 8 weeks since the debt ceiling was suspended.

comment image

Dangerous Variant
Dangerous Variant
  Anonymous
August 2, 2023 8:16 am

We need more immigrants, or all this debt will be rotting in the fields. The legal kind! So vote Republican or else the real racists will win again.

overthecliff
overthecliff
July 31, 2023 9:23 am

The FED must inflate otherwise the financial system will collapse now. When they inflate the financial system will collapse later. Either way we are screwed.

Dangerous Variant
Dangerous Variant
  overthecliff
August 2, 2023 8:37 am

Yes. But how much later? Seems like that’s what the great brains of the Empire have been focusing on for generations. Let the kids figure it out. I’ve got a 7AM T-time!

But time really hates being ignored in the scrum between logarithmic and exponential.

The delta between “now” and “later” is getting a little cramped. When the empire jumped the shark from value creation to forever growth it abandoned (t) Time. She is quite pissed now and so the whole idea of later is relative. Like the truth lol.

I always thought the sorts of depression/collapse scenarios could only really be understood in hindsight. As in, the trigger has already been pulled. We are just dwelling in that awkward time before the bullet expands in the brain pan and vents the alt-reality juice.

The only levers that remain are those that might slow down or speed up the tempo of this little intermezzo.

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 31, 2023 9:53 am

These Charts Show Why the Fed Is Terrified to Stop Raising Interest Rates and Why Nasdaq Is Ripping Higher

k31
k31
  Anonymous
July 31, 2023 6:27 pm

That text shown is not describing saving the economy, it is describing saving the government.

bidenTouchesKids
bidenTouchesKids
July 31, 2023 9:59 am

Might?
They’re working/hoping like hell it’ll happen. Can’t get their tyrannical utopia without burning it all down first.

Hollow man
Hollow man
July 31, 2023 11:21 am

Why the lack of national news on Yellow Freight shutting their doors.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Hollow man
July 31, 2023 7:08 pm

Because we are “Building Back Better™

Now eat your bugs!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Hollow man
July 31, 2023 8:50 pm

Take a look at cardboard demand. Things are not improving.

OfftheHingeZ
OfftheHingeZ
July 31, 2023 6:09 pm

This may come as a surprise to some older folks- but most millenials have lived our entire adult lives in a fucking “great depression”!

Literally most of the millenials I’ve known have been or currently are homeless, hopelessly lost in the throes of drug-addiction to numb the pain of living in a world with no viable future, and/or working total shit dead-end jobs that offer no hope of rising living standards.

Talk of a potential great depression? What a fucking joke! Get out from under your rock and talk to the kids, for once! We are NOT alright. Have ya looked around at society lately?! Everything is falling to pieces.

I don’t mean to sound like chicken little here. But there is no hope for a rising quality of life, anywhere. There’s no pulling yourself up by your damn bootstraps in this trickle-down fuckfest of an economy- particularly for those without the means to acquire skills, or those stuck sleeping on the pavement, or in the weeds, in the rain, in the snow, in the mosquitoes, in the ants, next to bears and mountain lions in the night, deadly snakes in the daytime, predatory gang members attempting to stalk your every move, feds quietly observing- sometimes near, sometimes far, sickness, injury, starvation.

You. Couldnt. Handle. This.

My life would eat you alive- probably literally.

If anybody wonders why drug addiction and suicide has skyrocketed among young people- particularly young men- …. i simply have no words for ignorance and naïvete that thick.

Society and decency have been destroyed in most places, and of the last few holdouts left, their days are numbered, and their societies are approaching the drain as well.

I hope you’re doing well. I really do. But us young people are hopelessly fucked- even the ones NOT saddled with student loans or drug addiction.

MIGHT TRIGGER A GREAT DEPRESSION just makes me want to punch King Kong in the fuckin face- even knowing what comes after that.

I’ve just seen too many good people stuck in a rut, unable to free themselves from sleeping on the sidewalk. It’s not as easy as just “getafuckinjob”. If it were- believe me- we’d all have made it by now. You know how many fuckin jobs i’ve worked over the years? You know how long I’ve been out here, buddy boy??

Fuck you… Great depression these nutz! Bourgeois 401k havin lil goobface… I’m glad things are good for a lot of people. But the last few weeks in my travels have been fucked up, and it’s made me realize us younger people have BEEN in a great depression, for a long time.

What else do you call starving on the street in an economy with no real prospects for a decent existence? Fuck this i should take up armed robbery! Even if I fail, at least I’ll get 3 hots and a cot for a decade or two, at least.

Might trigger a great depression… Piss off. Or piss in your own mouth. Open your eyes already. The economy is already failing. Damn near broken. On top of all the other bs i wake up to every day, from woke cocksuckers telling me how to think, cops harassing my shit, gang members and gimmigrants making life right fuckin difficult (damn near everywhere), white demographic collapse. I gotta hear, “might trigger a great depression” from some starched and suited extraterrestrial… Welcome to Earth, my guy! PLEASE say something clever, so i can empty those pockets- or more likely get put out of my misery.

Just… Fuck everything. Fuck New Weimar America.

I’m really hungry, in more ways than one, and my inner viking will plunder shit given half a chance lately. Nothing left to lose. Everything is retarded, and the worst kinds of people are prospering in this modern world- while i’ve seen some of the best of us fall into an abyss…

If America is the Roman Empire, I’d be a Gothic barbarian fleeing the Huns, bearing down on the empire’s doorstep, ready to plunder and then run as far and fast as possible.

Might trigger a great depression?!
MIGHT TRIGGER A GREAT DEPPRESSION, YOU SAY???!!!!

Daft cunts! Wake up already.

formerly anonymous
formerly anonymous
  OfftheHingeZ
July 31, 2023 7:33 pm

“When people have nothing else to lose…they lose it.”
– Gerald Celente-

PSBindy
PSBindy
  OfftheHingeZ
August 1, 2023 4:58 pm

Your hopelessness and frustration comes through X.

Got any skills? Not trying to poke ya.

You a mechanic? Carpenter? Nursing school is two years to an RN. Set for life then. The shit will have to hit the fan crazy hard for a RN to not be able to get employment.

Give the kid some ideas people.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  OfftheHingeZ
August 1, 2023 9:06 pm