over9k
So I didn't tell my wife, but I...
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This post:No don't remember. give us a clue
Well it's not about being recession proof so much as it is how much the rate rises pummel inflation vs pummel the economy. Rate rises obviously cannot contract inflation without also contracting growth but how balanced those contractions are depends on the economy. The yanks have the best balance referece rate rises pummeling inflation without the economy going to hell in a handbasket as well. Other countries are overwhelmingly tipped in the other direction. If rate rises have a much higher proportionate effect on inflation vs economic growth for the americans than other countries then this makes the U.S economy far better able to weather said rate rises (pummel inflation) without tipping into recession.
The other thing to keep in mind is the demand vs supply side of the equation. Pumping rates overwhelmingly hits the demand side. But what do you do if your demand side is already going anyway? Or if it's a supply side problem?
Comparing USA vs europe is an easy one to show with this because europe imposed a whole mountain of sanctions (cut off their supply of) russian oil that the yanks just didn't on account of the U.S not really being supplied with russian oil in the first place.
This gives europe a supply side restriction of the equation that must be balanced by restricting the demand side as well. The U.S does not have this problem - the equation is not unbalanced by russian oil sanctions because they were never being supplied with russian oil to begin with.
This is just one of many factors that enable the U.S economy to weather rate rises far better than, say, europe. There's a whole stack of others (demographics and labour supply being a huge one) but I probably don't need to write everyone a novel for them to get the point.
Neither. They're soon going to be stuck between a rock and a very hard place. Immigration is the *only* thing keeping quite a lot of economies growing/going now.
Aus is a very easy example of this - if this country depends so much on china, and china's going to hell in a handbasket, a substitute must be found or a new economic model must be adopted. Those are the only two options.
With you on this too, but what's going to give? Are we going to hit nasty recession(s) and they just let inflation run rampant in response?
There is no easy way out here.
Depends who's in power and which way the political winds are blowing. Fact is that central bank governors are appointed by politicians.
See I think it's the opposite of this bottle - jerome powell seems to be the only one really really pushing the "we're going to pummel inflation no matter what" narrative.
With the exception of NZ, all the others seem extremely hesitant to give their economies the exact painful medicine they need.
Are they perhaps all too aware of what it will mean (reference recession) if they do?
Are you asking me in a literal/economic sense or in a political sense?
Why we can/can't do something economically is a very different question than why we can/can't do it politically.