Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Traditional recessions are obsolete because policymakers cannot allow the collapse of asset prices which serve as collateral in a highly indebted world. They will preemptively inject liquidity to prop up markets, effectively creating a 'put option' on the system paid for by steady, long-term currency debasement.

Related Insights

After a decade of zero rates and QE post-2008, the financial system can no longer function without continuous stimulus. Attempts to tighten policy, as seen with the 2018 repo crisis, immediately cause breakdowns, forcing central banks to reverse course and indicating a permanent state of intervention.

Modern monetary policy is a deliberate trade-off: prevent a 1929-style depression by accepting perpetual, slow-moving inflation. This strategy, however, systematically punishes savers and wage-earners while enriching asset owners, creating a 'K-shaped' economy where the wealth gap consistently widens.

Since leaving the gold standard in 1971, the default government response to any financial crisis has been to expand the money supply. This creates a persistent, long-term inflationary pressure that investors must factor into their strategies, particularly for fixed-income assets.

Governments with massive debt cannot afford to keep interest rates high, as refinancing becomes prohibitively expensive. This forces central banks to lower rates and print money, even when it fuels asset bubbles. The only exits are an unprecedented productivity boom (like from AI) or a devastating economic collapse.

While the 2008 crisis centered on commercial banks and mortgages, today's problem is rooted in the central banks themselves. The Fed's policies actively devalued US treasuries—the bedrock of the system—making this a more fundamental central banking and currency crisis, not just a banking one.

Investors no longer react to underlying economic health but to the anticipated actions of the Federal Reserve. Bad news signals that the Fed will likely inject money into the system to prevent a crash, making asset prices go up. This creates a perverse incentive structure.

In today's hyper-financialized economy, central banks no longer need to actually buy assets to stop a crisis. The mere announcement of their willingness to act, like the Fed's 2020 corporate bond facility, is enough to restore market confidence as traders front-run the intervention.

Since WWII, governments have consistently chosen to print money to bail out over-leveraged actors rather than raise taxes or allow failure. This long-term policy has systematically devalued currency and concentrated wealth, creating today's deep economic divide.

The central strategy in macroeconomics is to stifle volatility in foundational markets like bonds and foreign exchange. This engineered stability allows nominal GDP to outpace debt, effectively devaluing it over time. This delicate balance is most vulnerable to unpredictable geopolitical shocks that can shatter the low-volatility regime.

Contrary to its capitalist branding, the U.S. economy functions as a Keynesian system. It relies on money printing and implicit market support (a 'plunge protection team') to inflate asset prices and maintain the illusion of growth, masking real-term devaluation.

Central Banks Will Prevent Recessions by Sacrificing Currency Value | RiffOn