Originally posted by Dr. Strangelove
View Post
Let's say the Fed bought a trillion dollars in packaged home mortgages. That becomes a debit against the Fed's balance sheet (and traditional economic theory says this injects money into the economy). But there is an off-setting credit to the Fed's balance sheet for the $ 1T. That means that money is taken out of the economy as people pay off their mortgages. The buying of bonds was the Fed's attempt to keep interest rates low. That is not the Fed's mandate
On the other hand, the Covid payouts were inflationary or very inflationary depending on the recipients' previous employment history. Paying underemployed persons $ 15.00 per hour for doing nothing (in addition to States' unemployment insurance) was purely inflationary. PPP, if forgiven, was also inflationary. If PPP had created a non-forgivable credit on the SBA's balance sheet, then it would have been far less inflationary.
And might I suggest that the Rs and Ds simply stop paying the authorized Covid largess that has not been spent? That would be a good trade-off for raising the debt limit, IMO.
Comment