How Bad Is Inflation? You Won’t Like the Answer…

From Brandon Smith

Historically speaking, inflation or stagflation have always been disastrous affairs. One is hard pressed to find any legitimate examples of a country that experienced an aggressive inflationary episode that came out better for it. A rare scenario would be one in which a nation inflates to fund a war that they then win, but usually negative consequences still happen later down the road.

The problem is that the effects of inflation can be subtle and far reaching, quietly creeping up on a population until suddenly there’s a tidal wave of societal crises. In the U.S. (and much of the western world) we are already witnessing elements of inflationary disaster; there’s a good reason why around 60% of Americans now have a pessimistic view of the future. A majority of people say life is worse for them today than it was in the past.

These kinds of dark sentiments usually coincide with inflationary or deflationary pressures. Inflation in particular can be devastating because it represents an ever expanding hidden tax on the life of each citizen. Not only that, but the cure is often worse than the disease, with central banks instituting interest rate hikes that continue longer than most people expect, which eventually lead to an engineered deflationary kick in the gut for the economy. For a time, prices will remain high on an array of necessities while wages stagnate, consumer demand shrinks and businesses go bankrupt as borrowing becomes impossible.

A system might be able to absorb this shock as long as it is not burdened with immense debt. In the case of the U.S., we are heavily burdened with over $33 trillion in national debt (officially) and over $17 trillion in consumer debt. The damage from stagflation and the Federal Reserve’s inevitable response will make matters worse.

So what should we expect?

More labor strikes

Labor strikes tend to occur in inflationary environments because, at least initially, demand for labor is high, giving labor more leverage against businesses. When people know they can easily jump into another job tomorrow the temptation is to leave their current job at the drop of a hat today.

Strikes were a common crisis in Weimar, Germany and Yugoslavia among others, in some cases because of legitimate concerns and in other cases because of communist provocateurs. The stagflation of the 1970s led to what is known as the “decade of strikes” in the U.S., with labor seeking higher wages to offset rising prices. The strikes sometimes lead to higher wages, which then in turn only lead to even higher prices as production shrinks and the costs are transferred to the consumer.

Wages are stagnant in the U.S., even after the minimum wage unofficially doubled due to labor shortages. Labor demand is high (for now), but the difference in our era compared to previous inflation events is that the vast majority of labor is focused into superfluous markets. It’s not as if manufacturing is a major component of the U.S. economy anymore. Rather, most employment is in the service sector.

No one really cares if McDonalds workers or Walmart workers or Hollywood writers go on strike. This does little to affect their daily lives. What it does do, though, is wear down the business sector over time until a portion of employers eventually downsize operations. If you have enough strikes and businesses can’t find workers in certain regions, they will close up shop and cut their losses. There were multiple incentives for major manufacturers to leave the U.S. for places like China in the 1970s and 1980s, but the constant union strikes during that period played a large part in the decision.

Today, you will have retail and food deserts; places where no businesses will dare set down roots because they can’t keep their stores staffed. In the end, the jobs disappear entirely.

Rising crime and government lies

Speaking of retail deserts, spiking crime rates are another factor that drives employers away from certain neighborhoods and cities.

Obviously this is a situation we are seeing play out in the past couple of years, but the interesting thing is the level of disinformation and denial that public officials have displayed in response. There has been a conspiracy among certain leftist state and local governments and the corporate media to dismiss or hide the rising crime problem in the U.S. The most important aspect of this has been the bizarre overhaul in the way U.S. cities report crime stats to the FBI and to the public.

It’s just a coincidence I’m sure, but starting around the beginning of the Covid pandemic there was a shift in procedures for criminal data reporting within the federal government. That change has allowed a number of cities to withhold crime stats until the new system is finished; this means that some cities will not be reporting reliable stats until 2024-2025.

So, when a leftist journalist says “Gee, conservatives keep complaining about rising crime in San Francisco, but crime is actually going down…” this is a lie. Cities like San Francisco are simply not required to provide full criminal reports for another year.

The crime rate is not only a symptom of high prices. That is a part of it, but the atmosphere of chaos that surrounds inflation also acts as a kind of signal to the mentally unstable and morally corrupt. Bad people will slither out of the woodwork because they view the instability as good cover for their criminal activities. With enough crime overwhelming police, a larger percentage of miscreants are likely to escape scrutiny.

More looting

Again, this is happening right now, but it is generally limited to short bursts in compact urban settings. As inflationary heat boils over, looting will become a daily occurrence and it will move away from retail areas into residential areas.

The fascinating thing about looting is that if you have one man stealing from a store, he is considered a criminal. If you have a group of people stealing from a store, suddenly they become “activists” that are fulfilling their “right to reparations.” There is a political weaponization of looters in the midst of inflation.

The looters are not looting because prices are higher and they need the resources, they are looting because inflation gives them an excuse to loot and political elements are encouraging them to do so.

Population migrations

Inflationary effects can move awkwardly through an economy, with some places far more damaged than others depending on how local governments respond. The worst governments will react with higher taxes in order to offset falling revenues in other areas. They will also reduce public services in order to save money, and this includes reductions in police even in the face of higher crime.

As people realize they are living in a dead zone that is draining their bank accounts dry, they will try to leave if they can. In the U.S., people have migrated by the millions away from blue states in the past few years, but this was more to do with them escaping Covid mandates and lockdowns than escaping economic malaise. The next wave of migrations will happen because of financial decline and the crime that comes with it.

This happens during most economic crisis events. It was common during the Great Depression to see Americans moving around like nomads to places they thought had more work and more prosperity – just like in John Steinbeck’s novel The Grapes of Wrath. Men left their families for jobs across the country so they could send money back home. The homeless spread out from urban areas into the countryside to beg for work or food from farmers.

During inflation, the cost of relocation can be debilitating. There will come a point when moving will be impossible. Until then there will be a swell of populations flowing like water from one place to the next seeking relief from the storm. Expect to see nomadic cultures return to the U.S. with RV caravans, tiny home meccas, tent cities and Hoovervilles (called “Bidenvilles” this time, perhaps).

Balkanization

In the former Yugoslavia, economic disaster accelerated existing social and political divisions to the point of national breakup. “Balkanization” is the fragmentation of a nation into smaller, mutually-hostile (or at least uncooperative) regions.

These kinds of conditions might be a way down the road for the U.S., or, they might be a lot closer than you think. In our case, the divisions will be between the people that want to continue going down the path that is taking us to oblivion, and the people who want to stop and reverse course.

It might seem like insanity, but a large part of the American populace still thinks the direction we are going is necessary and beneficial. They think the destruction of western culture is part of the greater good, that economic calamity is a means to an end and that they will be largely unaffected. There are also people who are just plain stupid and don’t realize that they’re supporting policies which will end up making their lives significantly worse.

Inflation creates chaos, but it can also bring clarity. That which is truly important moves to the forefront of the public mind. The decadent and the vile can no longer hide, but float to the surface like so much putrid ocean froth. People figure out quickly what they can live with and what they’d rather live without. Take steps now to prepare yourself and your family from the chaos ahead. Make certain you have untrackable, uninflatable and totally anonymous stores of wealth (necessities like food and water for survival, barter goods for trade and physical gold and silver for everything else). When you depend others for your very necessities, you’re at their mercy. They have you right where they want you.

Entire subcultures will form and separate to survive and thrive while other groups will try to stop them. Conflict is probably inevitable (as it was in Yugoslavia) but the point remains: Inflationary crisis has the ability to change almost everything.

This is no longer about prices – it’s about survival.

The people in Washington are destroying your retirement account! Slowly but surely, the value of your 401(k) or IRA is being eaten away thanks to out-of-control inflation. And our elected officials in D.C. don’t care! In fact, they seem to be accelerating this trend with new legislation to print trillions of new dollars. And this is why I recommend Gold IRAs. To see how they work, Get this FREE info kit from Birch Gold Group about Gold IRAs. (Comes with NO obligation or strings attached.)

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21 Comments
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
October 6, 2023 3:33 pm

Before this is over, Americans will be trying to sneak into Venezuela.

k31
k31
  Iska Waran
October 6, 2023 4:45 pm

That’s one way to empty out the riff raff.

James
James
October 6, 2023 3:36 pm

Folks,you know the drill,keep prepping while enjoying the day

Again,folks new to prepping,well…..,get at it and if you have ?’s fire away!

And as always,Prepper Cat is with you.

comment image

k31
k31
  James
October 6, 2023 4:48 pm

I moved our buck goats to a fresh paddock with lots of sumac and sweetgum sprouts they will eat down for me. Shirt off and soaking in the rays and not breaking a sweat for the first time since march.

MASTER OF UNIVERSE
MASTER OF UNIVERSE
  k31
October 6, 2023 8:00 pm

I moved the house flies out to the shed when I realized the
living room was filling up with flies from the garbage today.
The flies can now occupy the shed and multiply exponentially
for all I care.

It was great prep for watching TV tonight.

What are goats?

MOU

Anonymous
Anonymous
  MASTER OF UNIVERSE
October 6, 2023 8:43 pm

I stayed home from school today,
And played with my mice
I got tired of that
So I pulled wings off flies.

After I let them walk around for awhile
I bunched them all together,
And I stepped on the pile.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Anonymous
October 7, 2023 7:12 am

Sounds like it’s probably a true story.

poordude
poordude
October 6, 2023 3:50 pm

The worst is yet to come. Between now and the 2024 election, if there is a 2024 election, it is going to get wild and ugly.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
October 6, 2023 3:54 pm

In 1795 the United States of America produced it’s very first gold coin, one half ounce of gold with a value of $10 silver dollars. For one hundred and thirty eight years the US Mint produced gold coins and throughout that time the value of one ounce of gold remained fixed. In 1933 when FDR issued Executive order 6102 demanding that every American holding gold must surrender it in exchange for paper money at the rate of $20.67 per ounce, almost the same value it was assigned in 1795.

So inflation, at least for the fist 138 years of the US economy was just under 3%, or .046 per year.

Since 1933, the value of an ounce of gold- demoninated in Federal Reserve Notes- has increased from $20 to its current rate of $1,830.

It isn’t perfect, but it is the best metric for assessing just how debased our currency has become through inflation. An ounce of gold in 1795 weighs the same as an ounce of gold in 2023, but now it is worth close to 100 times as much in dollars.

The CPI is horseshit.

m
m
  hardscrabble farmer
October 6, 2023 4:45 pm

Try the shadowstats.com 1980-style CPI calculation.

k31
k31
  hardscrabble farmer
October 6, 2023 4:56 pm

The purpose of CPI is for the government to weasel out of the obligations it had no right to make in the first place.

bidenTouchesKids
bidenTouchesKids
October 6, 2023 3:55 pm

I expect as more people lose their jobs and life, the middle class will be joining in on the looting to keep their kids from starving and surprise surprise it’ll suddenly be racist and illegal to the left.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  bidenTouchesKids
October 6, 2023 7:37 pm

There is a difference between looting food and looting Nike’s or Sony’s. When it gets truly bad, there will be nothing left to loot.

bidenTouchesKids
bidenTouchesKids
  TN Patriot
October 6, 2023 11:17 pm

There is a difference between looting food and looting Nike’s or Sony’s.

No shit. My point was the hypocrisy of the left and that people are going to get more desperate as things get worse.

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 6, 2023 4:25 pm

And we have two octinagerian megalomaniacs vying to oversee us through this crisis. Good luck

k31
k31
  Anonymous
October 6, 2023 4:58 pm

At least they would like us to think that’s what they are trying to do.

B_MC
B_MC
October 6, 2023 5:09 pm

Long Bonds’ Historic 46% Meltdown Rivals Burst of Dot-Com Bubble

Losses on longer-dated Treasuries are beginning to rival some of the most notorious market meltdowns in US history.

Bonds maturing in 10 years or more have slumped 46% since peaking in March 2020, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s just shy of the 49% plunge in US stocks in the aftermath of the dot-com bust at the turn of the century. The rout in 30-year bonds has been even worse, tumbling 53%, nearing the 57% slump in equities during the depths of the financial crisis.

comment image

https://www.advisorperspectives.com/articles/2023/10/05/long-bonds-historic-meltdown-rivals-burst-dot-com-bubble

'Reality' Doug
'Reality' Doug
October 6, 2023 6:29 pm

A rather simplistic narrative with no loose ends. Sorta right isn’t good enough. Nuance is lost on most people. Didn’t finish it.

MASTER OF UNIVERSE
MASTER OF UNIVERSE
October 6, 2023 7:55 pm

The USA is insolvent and cannot possibly reinvent itself in light
of the past half century of wholesale assault on the entire world
via American hegemony via the now defunct Petrodollar that
Nixon bamboozled the entire world with.

He said it would be a temporary closing of the gold window, but
he gave no timeline as to what ‘temporary’ actually meant in 1971.

Bottom line is that Nixon was a crook that worked for an even more
crooked crook which is the Corporation of the United States of America
and now widely known crook & racketeer not unlike the Mafia or pirates
of the high seas of yesteryear.

America was engineered to inflate and deflate, but this time it can only
hyperinflate because the U.S. Treasury & Feral Reserve launched far
too many rounds of lower-for-longer free money that has to work its
way through the world economy that has already decided that USD and
hegemon status is laughable at best in light of BRICS & One Belt One Road
forward via China.

American Weimar Republic is America’s undoing and that undoing will
not abate until it is in ruins.

MOU

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 7, 2023 8:51 am

The problem with inflation is how they measure it. It’s bad enough that they keep key metrics out of the calculation (that’s a huge understatement) but inflation is a mostly YOY measurement. So if inflation goes up 20% this year and 15% next year, they tell us inflation dropped 25%. In reality the cost of goods and services is sky high compared to the base price. Inflation is not an objective calculation. It’s a relative calculation.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
October 7, 2023 4:16 pm

A very important distinction!