Hygro
soundcloud.com/hygro/
Yes.
Yes.
Personally with inflation over 8% I believe he must raise the interest rate to 10%. Don't care if it causes a major recession, this will come back to bite us on the butt harder if the the whole system is not quashed now. Crushing the market is the only way to increase efficiency and get business to orient itself away from the irresponsible quick and easy money generating methods of the past ten years. It's time people feel the burn and get back to hard work, employment, and increased productivity. No more cutting corners, no more embezzlement, no more COVID handout scams, no more crypto, no more nepotism, no more insider ponzi schemes, no more work from home, no more nfts, no more free coffee and perks at the office, no more company payed vacations. Learn to make money the old fashioned way, strong work ethic, no debts.
I have more economics education than Jerome Powell, who is a lawyer with a poli sci bachelors. I received my economics education from a top 3 worldwide econ department with an interdisciplinary focus on technical monetary macroeconomics, particularly in the context of crises, and the history of economic thought, focused on monetary macroeconomics.Do you have a PHD? Cause that's essentially what you need to have any clout against Jerome Powell. It also needs to be from the "right" Ivy League college to have any credible respect.
Do you have a PHD? Cause that's essentially what you need to have any clout against Jerome Powell. It also needs to be from the "right" Ivy League college to have any credible respect.
I have more economics education than Jerome Powell, who is a lawyer with a poli sci bachelors. I received my economics education from a top 3 worldwide econ department with an interdisciplinary focus on technical monetary macroeconomics, particularly in the context of crises, and the history of economic thought, focused on monetary macroeconomics.
Tax the richInflation has been jacking the hell out of me. Food(ha!) is getting significantly expensive as is the fuel to go buy it(going back up, diesel stayed high). Medical care is becoming a memory, and lol at fixing the house. Better just sell it to some coastal douche like the sort that keep absentee buying and three year flipping agricultural real estate around here. Maybe we could give them government subsidies for being the most educated and economically viable population or something? Maybe make older cars pay a lot more fuel taxes to force people to patronize Elon Musk?
This is all pretty fantastic so naturally I’m into itI am going to make a big prophecy on oil right now, and may even solve the inflation crisis because if you decrease the cost of fuel you also decrease the cost of food which is where a lot of the inflation is being felt. Now it may sound counterintuitive, perhaps bizarre, but nevertheless there may be profound underlying motives behind it should the prophecy come true.
You know how OPEC recently announced they were cutting production and now everyone is panicking about how oil will skyrocket? Also know how despite this oil a few days later is now sinking on a "recession" happening, yet despite this, oil producer stocks are still creeping up when they should technically fall if the price is falling? This means a big insider power play is in the works, a crazy power play and one that sounds like a conspiracy theory, even going against what one would think is profitable to producers.
In other words in plain English the American oil companies are actually already ramping up production right now quietly or for some prepping up to do so this winter. But why do this? Wouldn't they want to keep prices high? Didn't Saudi Arabia give them a free gift? And I would say wrong. Because the Saudis are actually not well liked by US producers, see they have always been at the mercy of only being able to profit when the Saudi family says so and they're sick of it. Last time the Saudis manipulated prices they dumped all their oil to make it too cheap which forced many American companies to take less. This time however they want revenge and see it as time to give the Saudis a taste of their own medicine. Before revenge would have been difficult as many Presidents have always favored the Saudi monarchs and gave them special economic assistance this negating the impact any revenge scheme would otherwise have. Now that OPEC has chosen to cut before the midterms Biden is pissed and might revoke such economic privileges, therefore revenge is now impactful.
So what kind of revenge is this? Well US producers will now dump as much oil as they can on to the market in order to drive prices down knowing very well that Arabia has sort of left itself vulnerable by now selling in less volume. This now allows the Americans to take control of the lion's share of the market now that the Saudis have chosen not to produce such a portion. Even if prices go lower it may still be worth it for American producers because it would slowly squeeze the Saudis out of the market as buyers lose faith in their unusually high price, thus preferring to make long term deals and contracts which favor the purchase of American oil instead. Only way the Saudis could avoid this would be to lower prices and increase production themselves or else risk losing their reputation as reliable businessmen who will always ship a requested volume of oil. This would nevertheless be untenable to the Saudis if they don't get American assistance anymore, because before they could increase production at a loss and get free welfare from the US government essentially to carry the burden of selling at a loss, now with an angry Biden cutting off assistance this won't be possible anymore. The oil companies now see this and know if Biden cuts such assistance they can then mass produce and keep prices low enough to hurt the Saudis (but not so low enough to hurt them as Biden will have now castrated Arabia's ability to retaliate).
Once the Arabians get completely anally destroyed by American producers, it could potentially lead to the collapse of the Saudi bloodline and the weakening into ineptitude of OPEC. Because should the Saudis be denied a way of making adequate money they will struggle to buy inflated grain prices due to the ongoing Ukraine war. Rebellion and insurrection will ensue taking out the American companies most sworn rival of competition. While it may not be too profitable to the American companies, taking out global competition is always worth it for future price control, so long as the revenue stream is still enough to cover basic operating expenses.
Now when this clusterfudge of drama ensues it will lower prices at the pump and finally give much needed breathing space for supply chains to recorrect themselves. The Middle East will become unstable as a result when this is all done and Putin will also suffer from the dip (not to mention Fox News' overly bearish predictions will be trashed), but who cares, domestic inflation will be solved and Jerome Powell will pause/pivot. Then a new bull market will begin and we will all be living in paradise!
I suppose we're going to have to define "rich," this being politics and all. Given the recent programs, it seems like this has increasingly moved away from status and income, since heads of household that make anything under a quarter million a year qualify as "not so much" and is refocusing more around people who managed to pay obligations and save some, regardless of income. So the easy marks. Seniors, fixed incomes, asset forfeiture, the like. Definitely not currently influential/powerful/compensated. So on one hand, yes, I agree. And a cooling of the economy will open up room for targeted government spending to actually have effect. On the other, I'm seeing at least some of more of the same under that guise. If I heard more about progressive income taxes in particular, I'd be more on board. But those don't seem as popular as they did, after the political realignment started.Tax the rich
The 'rich' who are managers, small business owners and home owners?Tax the rich
The 'rich' who are managers, small business owners and home owners?
This is all pretty fantastic so naturally I’m into it
Well, we have learned nothing in the past 4,500 years of history. Still substituting primitive moralizing nonsense for any actual understanding of the system.
I have more economics education than Jerome Powell, who is a lawyer with a poli sci bachelors. I received my economics education from a top 3 worldwide econ department with an interdisciplinary focus on technical monetary macroeconomics, particularly in the context of crises, and the history of economic thought, focused on monetary macroeconomics.