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The Fed Can’t Stop Supply-Side Inflation

Summary:
The Fed and other central banks have zero control of supply-driven inflation, period. America’s financial punditry is bewitched by four fatal fantasies: 1. Inflation is demand-driven. If the Federal Reserve (or other central banks) reduce demand with monetary tools like raising interest rates, inflation will cool. 2. Substitution of high-cost goods with lower-cost goods reduces inflation, and substitution is infinite: there’s always cheaper chicken if beef gets too pricey. 3. Higher prices will lead suppliers to increase production, which will increase supply and reduce prices. 4. The Federal Reserve has control of all these inflation-reducing dynamics via interest rates and its balance sheet (buying or selling various durations of Treasury bonds). All of these

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The Fed and other central banks have zero control of supply-driven inflation, period.

America’s financial punditry is bewitched by four fatal fantasies:

1. Inflation is demand-driven. If the Federal Reserve (or other central banks) reduce demand with monetary tools like raising interest rates, inflation will cool.

2. Substitution of high-cost goods with lower-cost goods reduces inflation, and substitution is infinite: there’s always cheaper chicken if beef gets too pricey.

3. Higher prices will lead suppliers to increase production, which will increase supply and reduce prices.

4. The Federal Reserve has control of all these inflation-reducing dynamics via interest rates and its balance sheet (buying or selling various durations of Treasury bonds).

All of these are fantasies, fantasies that are fatal because they’re flat-out false. The Fed has no control over supply-driven inflation, which is what we have now. Consider eggs. The price has skyrocketed not because consumers suddenly ramped up demand that is now outstripping supply, but because essential inputsto supply such as feed and energy have soared in price and constraints that have nothing to do with interest rates such as the spread of bird viruses.

These essential inputs are going up in cost due to factors completely unrelated to interest rates or monetary policy. Drought and weather extremes are constraining the supply of animal feed stocks, and energy prices are being driven by geopolitical forces completely outside central bank control.

Infinite substitution is also false. What’s the substitute for eggs? Silkworm goo squeezed into plastic eggs? Well, not yet… there are no substitutes for eggs. And with the soaring input costs of producing chickens, chicken is no longer that cheap.

Higher input costs affect all production. There are no cheaper substitutes when essential inputs for everything are soaring due to supply constraints. The financial fantasy holds that entrepreneurs will rush to build new production to reap the gains generated from higher prices, but this is nonsense when input costs are rising for all producers.

Unless somebody can get nearly free energy and nearly-free feed, the new producer’s cost will be the same as existing producers, whose profits are being pressured as prices rise. It makes no sense to pour capital into a sector with declining profits and higher input costs.

The idea that raising ot lowering interest rates by 1% is going to magically resolve supply constraints generated by systemically higher input costs is delusional on multiple levels. In the magical imagination of our financial punditry, some fresh-faced entrepreneur will plant more grain to feed chickens because it’s so darn profitable.

Nice, but what if there’s no water? What if the cost of fertilizer and other inputs is so high that even higher prices might not yield a profit for such a risky venture? The disconnected-from-reality pundits don’t factor in the possibility that one storm could wipe out the harvest just as the crop reaches maturity.

The Fed Can’t Stop Supply-Side Inflation

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As for energy: there’s a 10-year permit process for whatever the fresh-faced entrepreneur has in mind.Consider the much-hyped modular mini-reactors so many expect will solve all our energy problems. One design just received the go-ahead, and a prototype is expected to reach the initial trials stage in…. 2030. Yeehaw, that will solve our inflation right now, yowza.

Meanwhile, back in the real economy the pundits don’t appear to inhabit, the Fed blithely oversaw the stripmining of wage earners for 45 years and is now powerless to stop the inevitable snapback. Wages are rising because workers need a living wage (Garsh, imagine that! Funny, that’s not in any of our statistical models).

The Fed increasing or decreasing its balance sheet by $1 trillion has zero effect on wages rising for profoundly systemic reasons. And while we’re highlighting the Fed’s complete powerlessness over the input constraints of essentials, let’s also burst the pundits’ delusional fantasy that the Fed raising or lowering interest rates by a point or two has any effect on tax donkeys and debt-serfs whose student loans and credit card balances remain at rapaciously high interest rates.

The fantasy that the Fed can reduce supply-driven inflation arising from systemic constraints on essential inputs is not just delusional, it’s toxic because it generates unrealistic expectations and diverts policies into dead-ends where real solutions become impossible because the assumptions being made are false.

The Fed and other central banks have zero control of supply-driven inflation, period. Trying to crush inflation by crushing demand won’t fix inflation because the source is supply, not demand.

Note to Fed: hoping that we’ll love a gross-beyond-belief silkworm-goo substitute for eggs is remarkably representative of your powerlessness and disconnect from reality.

The Fed Can’t Stop Supply-Side Inflation

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Charles Hugh Smith
At readers' request, I've prepared a biography. I am not confident this is the right length or has the desired information; the whole project veers uncomfortably close to PR. On the other hand, who wants to read a boring bio? I am reminded of the "Peanuts" comic character Lucy, who once issued this terse biographical summary: "A man was born, he lived, he died." All undoubtedly true, but somewhat lacking in narrative.

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