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Easy Money Creates Hard Times

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Easy Money Ruined Us | Easy Money Creates Hard Times The Hawaiian Islands Editor?s note: After the

Easy Money Ruined Us [The Daily Reckoning] February 03, 2024 [WEBSITE]( | [UNSUBSCRIBE]( Easy Money Creates Hard Times The Hawaiian Islands Editor’s note: After the Great Financial Crisis, the Fed pursued easy-money policies with wild abandon, which lasted the better part of a decade. They were supposed to help the economy recover. But as Charles Hugh Smith shows you today, easy money ruined us. [Charles Hugh Smith] CHARLES HUGH SMITH We have yet to reach a full reckoning of the consequences of the era of easy money, but it's abundantly clear that it ruined us. The damage was incremental at first, but the perverse incentives and distortions of easy money — zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), credit available without limits to those who are more equal than others — accelerated the institutionalization of these toxic dynamics throughout the economy and society. Fifteen long years later, the damage cannot be undone because the entire status quo is now dependent on the easy-money bubble for its survival. Should the bubbles inflated by easy money pop, the financial system and the economy will collapse into a putrid heap, undone by the perversions and distortions of endless easy money. Easy money created destructive, mutually reinforcing distortions on multiple fronts. Let's examine the primary ways easy money led to ruin. 1. The near-zero rate credit was distributed asymmetrically; only the wealthiest few had access to the open spigot of "free money." The rest of us saw mortgage rates decline, but we were still paying much higher rates of interest than corporations, banks and financiers. If we'd all been given the opportunity to borrow a couple million dollars at 1% and put the easy money into bonds yielding 2.5%, skimming a low-risk 1.5% for producing nothing, we'd have jumped on it. But that opportunity was only available to banks, the super-wealthy, corporations and financiers. Pictures That Tell Thousands of Words The charts below show the perverse consequences of offering the wealthiest few limitless money at near-zero rates while the rest of us paid much higher interest. The wealthiest few could buy income-producing assets on the cheap at carrying costs no ordinary investor could match. Since there was so much "free money" sloshing around for financial elites to tap, the demand for income-producing assets soared, pushing prices into the stratosphere. These enormous increases in valuation generated stupendous capital gains for the wealthiest few. Look at 2009 as the starting point in these charts, as that's when the Federal Reserve instituted ZIRP and opened the spigots of easy money to "those with first access," i.e. banks, corporations and financiers. Here we see how the assets of the top 0.1% more than tripled since 2009, far outpacing inflation. [image 1] The net worth of the top 1% went ballistic as well. Nearly free credit is rocket fuel if you're first in line and nobody else gets the same interest rate. [Click here for more...]( You’re looking at one of the best moneymakers across the entire financial publishing industry… and a key member of Jim Rickards’ network. He’s more important than JPMorgan’s former CEO… more influential than the Federal Reserve’s board members… and more lucrative than some of the most famous hedge fund managers on Wall Street. Because he’s doing something life-changing for the everyday American. [Click Here To Reveal His Identity]( [image 2] The bottom 50% of American households lost ground in the era of easy money. This is not coincidence, it's direct causation: Give the lowest interest rates and unlimited credit to the wealthy, and they will buy up the most productive assets, leaving crumbs for the rest of the American citizenry. [image 3] Here's the Fed balance sheet, the money they created out of thin air and injected into the cheap-unlimited-credit-for-the-wealthy machine. [image 4] Note how the easy money sparked federal borrowing. Federal debt was under the line of GDP expansion until 2009, at which point it took off in a parabolic ascent. Now that interest rates have finally normalized a bit, the gargantuan interest on this debt will be extracted from the citizenry via higher taxes and/or reduced federal spending. (Giveaways to wealthy political donors will of course remain untouched, along with tax havens for the super-wealthy.) [image 5] The Social Perversions of Easy Money The social perversions of easy money are equally destructive. When it's cheap and easy to borrow more money, that becomes the "obvious" way to deal with challenges. This incentivizes enterprises and institutions to advance those with skills in finance and PR rather than in management. With the discipline imposed by the cost of money gone and the expansion of opportunities to reap fortunes by pyramiding credit and leverage, competency was redefined from management focused on increasing productivity and cutting costs through efficiencies to extracting the soaring value of existing assets: Nothing new was produced but yowza, a lot of people sure got rich. The rot created by easy money has seeped into every fiber of our social, political and economic orders. Correspondent D.T. drew a direct line between easy money and the decline of competence in The Powers That Be: Nepo[tism] babies selected by accident of birth without any tempering in flames... cocooned in their own reality, disdainful of the unselected, coddled and hothoused, ignorant of history and, worst of all, supremely confident in the superiority of their own righteous abilities... because when you get first dibs on the free money there are no consequences you can't buy your way out of. [Urgent Publisher Warning]( Hi, I’m Matt Insley. I’m the Publisher at Paradigm Press. Today, I have bad news to share regarding the future of Jim Rickard’s newsletter. [Click Here Now For My Announcement]( Is there any doubt that what some are calling The Disconnected Elite (DE) have fortified their Ivy League-luxe-enclave bubbles and unearned privileges with the easy money that comes with their position atop the heap? The cost of this elevation of incompetence, the complete disconnection from the realities of everyday Americans and the hubristic confidence in their own talent — i.e., believing your own PR — has hollowed out the nation's institutions in ways those outside the institution cannot yet observe. The rot caused by easy money will only become fully visible when the hollowed-out institutions start collapsing under the weight of incompetence, debt and hubris. Obsolete System Though few want to admit it, our system is obsolete. And obsolete systems are much more difficult to replace, for everyone being enriched by these arrangements will move heaven and Earth to keep them firmly in place, lest their share of the gravy train diminish. The maximization of self-interest comes at the cost of system stability. Put another way, the system can either be optimized for self-enrichment or for dynamic stability, but it cannot be optimized for both, as self-enrichment is best served by monopoly — the destruction of the dynamic stability created by competition — or by reducing adaptability as a means of locking in private gains. And so various policies are ramped up to keep all the machinery in its current configuration. These policies may be for show, accomplishing little, or they may reach extremes, as only extremes can keep the machinery duct-taped together as obsolescence decays the system's functionality. We can anticipate the uneven unraveling of systems which no longer respond to extreme policy "saves." I expect health care, higher education, commercial real estate and banking and the financial system based on extremes of debt and speculative leverage to all unravel, despite the hasty passage of ever more extreme policies. In my view, there is no way the status quo can chug along virtually unchanged for decades to come. There are two basic reasons: 1) Do the math: The limits of the real world cannot be dissolved by trickery, and… 2) The core systems of the status quo are obsolete. They are being defended not because they work but because those being enriched by the systems want to maintain their power and perquisites. Another way of saying this is that the forces that have been tailwinds — hyper-globalization, hyper-financialization and stable global arrangements — have shifted into headwinds. What were deemed solutions have become problems, and doing more of what worked in the past only accelerates the unwinding. Like what you’ve read? [Go here for more.]( Regards, Charles Hugh Smith for The Daily Reckoning [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:feedback@dailyreckoning.com) Editor’s note: Here at Paradigm Press, we have a responsibility to make sure you’re actively prepared for whatever the market throws at you. That’s why we’re offering a [$588.88 credit [ACCESS HERE]]( for a select 1% of our readership to test-drive a unique strategy. Jim Rickards says a financial war is brewing. And according to Jim, this strategy is a completely new way to invest during the ongoing currency war… and targets profits that are [potentially 50–100 times bigger than what people see trading the stock market.]( Please take a look so you can decide if it makes sense for you. [click here for more...]( This credit won’t last forever, so [go here now to claim it.]( Thank you for reading The Daily Reckoning! We greatly value your questions and comments. Please send all feedback to [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:feedback@dailyreckoning.com) [Charles Hugh Smith] [Charles Hugh Smith]( is an American writer and blogger, and serves as the chief writer for the blog "Of Two Minds". Started in 2005, this site has been listed No. 7 in CNBC's top alternative financial sites, and his commentary is featured on a number of sites including Zerohedge.com, The American Conservative, and Peak Prosperity. [Paradigm]( ☰ ⊗ [ARCHIVE]( [ABOUT]( [Contact Us]( © 2024 Paradigm Press, LLC. 1001 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, MD 21201. By submitting your email address, you consent to Paradigm Press, LLC. delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your The Daily Reckoning e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from The Daily Reckoning, feel free to [click here.]( Please note: the mailbox associated with this email address is not monitored, so do not reply to this message. We welcome comments or suggestions at feedback@dailyreckoning.com. This address is for feedback only. For questions about your account or to speak with customer service, [contact us here]( or call (844)-731-0984. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We allow the editors of our publications to recommend securities that they own themselves. However, our policy prohibits editors from exiting a personal trade while the recommendation to subscribers is open. In no circumstance may an editor sell a security before subscribers have a fair opportunity to exit. The length of time an editor must wait after subscribers have been advised to exit a play depends on the type of publication. All other employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. The Daily Reckoning is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. Please read our [Privacy Statement.]( If you are having trouble receiving your The Daily Reckoning subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox by [whitelisting The Daily Reckoning.](

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