Does GDP Present an Accurate Picture of the Economy? Not Likely
The most popular measure of economic growth is GDP. However, GDP movement is driven by changes in the money supply, not real economic factors.
The most popular measure of economic growth is GDP. However, GDP movement is driven by changes in the money supply, not real economic factors.
While the Fed and the Biden administration try to assure Americans that their banks are safe and secure, the numbers tell a different story.
Dr. Paul Cwik joins Bob to discuss the inverted yield curve's "signal" of an impending recession.
A central tenet of Keynesian economics is that governments must run budget deficits to stimulate economic growth. But government spending actually shrinks the economy.
Even after two years of "transitory" inflation, America's ruling classes insist that prices are falling and that all of this is temporary. We don't believe them.
By any conventional measures of finance, the Federal Reserve has negative equity. In the long run, cooking the books only puts off the day of reckoning.
The current banking crises have deep roots in US financial history. Monetary authorities have engaged in inflationary behavior for more than a hundred years.
After years of inflationary intervention, the Federal Reserve has no more rabbits to pull out of the hat.
The most popular measure of economic growth is GDP. However, GDP movement is driven by changes in the money supply, not real economic factors.
The elite playbook: blame the people so they fight each other.