tv Cross Talk RT August 10, 2021 8:30pm-9:00pm EDT
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in the i will the one of the worst ever mass shootings in america was in las vegas in 2017. the tragedy a close a little of the real last vegas. where many say elected officials are controlled by christina learners. the dangerous shooting revealed what the l v m p d really is. and now it's part of the spin machine to the american public barely remember that happens, that just shows you the power of money and las vegas. the powerful showed that true
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colors when the pen demik hit the most contagious contagion that we've seen in decades. and then you have a mayor who doesn't care. so here's caroline goodman, offering the lives of the vegas residence to be the control group, to the shiny facades conceal of deep indifference to the people vice gonna be saved and able to take an action. absolutely keep the registering and keep the slot machines doing. this is a money machine is a huge cash register that is ran by people who don't care about people's lives being lost. ah ah hello and welcome to cross talk where all things are considered. i'm peter lavelle . we all see it and we all feel it. the significant increase of inflation has many
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economist concerned and consumers, needless to say, terrified why the sudden increase in prices. is this temporary and what can be done to tame this cruelest form of taxation on working people, the cross fucking increasing inflation. i'm joined by my guess peter shift weston. he is the host of the peter ship show podcast in great barrington. we have pete earl, he's an economist at the american institute for economic research. and here in moscow we have sophia done. yes, she is a russia and c i s. economists at renaissance capital r, i cross roles. and in fact, that means you can jump in anytime you want. and i always appreciate it. we have 3 peters on the program here. so i'm going to be very specific location. we're going to peter in, in west and peter, i didn't want, you know, obviously i'm a news junkie. i'm always trying to figure out what's going on. i cover
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a wide brett, the media and there seems to be a lot of questions about the severity of the inflation that we're experiencing, how long it's going to last and actually where it's coming from. i know this is your yours, one of your great specializations and i compliment you. i see you all the time on a variety of programs. what is your take here? because if i can just add the little salt and pepper to it, it's been politicized as well. as usual, go ahead peter. well, you laid it out correctly and the intro inflation is attacks, and the source is government because that's who taxes us. the only way to reduce inflation would be to dramatically cut government spending because government spending is being paid for through inflation. we're running record budget deficits . and so instead of taking our money and spending it, the government is taking our purchasing power by printing new money and spending that. so the increase in prices that we're all experiencing is the tax that we are
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paying to finance government. in addition, the federal reserve is trying to prop up the stock market prop up the real estate market and prop up the u. s. government can only do that by keeping interest rates artificially low, but in order to keep seeing money to buy blonds. so as long as the fed is artificially suppressed, the interest rates, it is going to have to create inflation to do it. and because we have so much that the fed is now forced to keep interest rates at 0 and not so unfortunately, average americans, the middle class or the working poor, are going to suffer the most severe bout of inflation in us history far greater than anything experienced during the decade of the 97020, you know, let me go to pete here and in great barrington, i mean one of the explanations i've been told in it,
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and it's basically coming from the fed. this is all temporary, it's bent up demand. it's going to, it'll smooth out as we, but that's not happening here. ok. and, and i mentioned that working class middle class people in my introduction intentionally because i room, i was small, i was young, but i do remember the 19 seventy's and that was a very, very dreary time. and we thing a repeat of that. go ahead p. i remember stagnation to as a kid in the seventy's, so i read everything that peter just said, peter chef. but i do want to add the following. you know, we didn't have a massive increase in the money supply in 2020, just over 25 percent. and space of a few months, which is a definite cause for concern, but a lot of people are looking at the year over year cpi numbers. and it's not an a look at the headline number. you have to look at what might be index is too big contributors to the recent jump. right? so 1st you have gasoline, oil in the energy basket,
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which were up over 50 percent year a year. but you have to remember that right? about a year ago, this time with a situation where russia started maybe at least a lot of oil in the markets when demand was probably because of lockdown. so you've had this surgeon oil prices, but it's come from where one point we had west touch was international that are intermediate rather at negative $32.00 negative $34.00 a barrel. the 2nd thing is we got a huge spike used cars, an auto insurance, 30 percent 70 percent increases or expectedly, which has to do with shortages and people get back on the road. so they're assigned to inflation. it's worrisome. but in terms of the c p, i number about an inflation, that's not very alarming. what we see in financial markets. that's more alarming. ok, well let's, let's go to our guest in moscow here. so yeah, i'm very concerned. i mean, if you look at it globally, where is mostly this inflation coming from because we have
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a lot of western governments with pump huge amounts of money, which i find really in some cases it was absolutely necessary. i don't have a problem with that, but i mean, there's so much money that has been allocated to be pumped into the economy. is it really necessary right now? because from what i understand, a lot of these glowing in, you know, g d p numbers and all, but, you know, they're saying, oh, they're all great. but is, is that counting inflation is inflation pumping up those numbers? they're not really real numbers here. can you, can you make an assessment on a global scale when it comes to inflation when it, because we just mentioned oil use cars, saudi arabia, russia, globally, it will. where is the biggest tripping point? if i could put it that way, go ahead. so i would say that we're not talking about like anything there is like the question, 1st of all, just because the lack of inflation is exactly the product. well, the recovery on demand, and it's like, you know,
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probably what most unusual is that it's very, very symmetric. across the globe, and the reaction to the crisis was very symmetric across the globe. so it was quite different from previous to crisis. just because like a not only advanced economy for, at the depth is seamless, not only from a physical side of, but also from a monetary side. but 1st time in to the key emerging markets also over quite an even once your policy. so that's, that's, that's actually makes it a global phenomenon. barge, i probably would disappoint you, but as a formal will probably be in a former center, but i'm on that side who believe that inflation is temporary for now. ok, well it's interesting because you can tell there's the that's the perspective i keep getting illegal back to peter here is, is the fed being responsible here because, i mean it's, it's not over the last 14 months so that we've seen increased huge injections here we've, we've seen a lot of really easy money for a long time now,
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and then we've got supercharged go ahead. peter was. busy the federal reserve has never responsible. so why should they change now? but remember, what are the other things the fed is never is honest. i the fed is all about spin. it's all about trying to ins. so if you recall, early in the mortgage crisis, when the sub prime market blew up and the threat to the entire mortgage market was obvious, as was the threat to the economy. what did the federal reserve do? they came out and reassured everybody that there was nothing to worry about that the subprime problems were contain. why did they do that? because they, we're hoping that by denying that the problem existed, maybe they can somehow, well it out of existence and somehow get people to change their behavior in the face of what should have been an obvious crisis. and they were hoping to averted,
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and i think you're doing the same thing now. the fed has absolutely no ability to fight inflation. so why even acknowledge that it's a threat when you can't do anything about it. so the only thing that you could do is been i, why do the markets tell everybody that it's all temporary? and that explains their failure to act. but real failure to act is big. it's impossible because the only way to fight inflation is it turn off the monetary spigots to raise interest rates of cards. economy that they've erected. we have a worse financial crisis in 2008. the government would be forced to slash spending dramatically. they may even have the default on the national debt, who knows what happened at fed actually fought inflation. so b, because they can, they're just denying the problem,
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but there is absolutely no evidence to suggest what we're really experiencing is the beginning of a long overdue, huge increase. and the cost of living, not only the result of the inflation that the fed has created since the pandemic, but of all the inflation that we created before the big that we've yet to deal with, you know, made a p 11 of the arguments out there is that if, if this inflationary trend is sustained, then it will dramatically cut back on consumption. but the things will be just too expensive here. i mean, how does that play into what is, what is call, what is called the recovery from the pandemic? because, you know, we could go through a w, a, b, a k, all the, all the alphabet letters here. but how is going to affect the recovery and who is going to be hurt most. we've already mentioned working people go ahead, peep, so the problems of inflation fall most heavily upon people who have either low
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income, the working poor and also people on fixed income because the reduction of the value of dollars while receiving the same amount of dollars, basically winds up being a sort of a tax, you know, i pointed out before the d, c. p, i numbers are a little bit misleading, but we have seen classic inflationary effects. both financial markets and commodities which is perfectly aligned with both economic theory in history. lumber prices, rosemary, 800 percent. over a period stuck into seas have skyrocketed. there's weird price spice in places like hockey mon cards and non fund tompkins. so while the c p i number was kind of nothing, nothing burgers so far will know when a few months where she did a lot of mixed signals but commodities, whether it's lumber or whether it's food commodities, all that sort of thing affect everyone. so it won't be long before the price increases, do start to attract everybody, but disproportionately. we're going to see it effect on the poor people on a fixed income. okay. so if you're in moscow here,
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i mean this 30 seconds before we go to the break here. i mean, is there any kind of coordinated global approach to dealing with this problem because it's growing in magnitude and it's coming fast. go ahead. well, i would say that the, the, the now the mom report with the respond via this go to need it again just because emerging market is already started the normalization cycle of the monetary policy. so we're moving close to neutral rate, some somehow. oh, $30.00, the ethic over the increase of the rate. and i think that's important. see what we see now is that very unusual dynamic between emerging market develop market like for example, the u. s. n station is now higher than the last emerging market that i'd look at. ok, all right, i'll get on that. no, we're going to go to a short break out about short break. we'll continue our discussion on searching inflation. stay with our team.
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the way make no, certainly no borders under the line to nationalities as emerge. we don't have authority. we don't actually the whole world needs to take action and be ready. people judge, you know, governors crisis we can do better, we should be better. everyone is contributing each in our own way, but we also know that this crisis will not go on forever. the challenge is paid for the response has been massive. so many good people are helping us. it makes us feel very proud that we are together
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in self governance as war as further and further away from the day to day reality of people on planet earth, in particular, america with its claims to have a government bind for the people. but if the fed is now completely controlled by wall street banks and the said it's not completely controlled by the map, which is a super national organization that serve the globalist. as the recall then, the idea of self sovereignty in america takes another huge quantum leap of some version. ah, welcome back, the cross talk. we're all things considered on peter lavelle to remind you we're discussing searching inflation. me. ah,
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are you, let's go back to peter and western peter, you know, we've, we've talked about the how economists look at this. we have 3 economists on the panel here. and it, all of you make a lot of perfect sense to me, but it's really a political problem at the end of the day because a lot of promises, i have been made promises that are going to be made here. it's, it's about how we get out of this crisis here and the powers that be decided you spend your way out. ok, and all 3 of you, of enumerated so far in this program, the immense dangers of it. and they're not, they don't have the downside, like the rest of us. ok, working people, they're the ones that get us up for the most and they will be a backlash. we at least 3 of us here. remember the 19 seventy's and stagflation. go ahead, peter. well, of course it is political, i mean, the bided administration. every member of congress wants to give the voters something for nothing. right. the government wants to make sure that all the people
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who don't have jobs, many of them, of course, are just choosing not to have jobs. but the government wants to make sure that they have plenty of money to span, even though they didn't earn that money, even though they didn't help produce any goods or provide any services. the government wants to give the money to buy goods and services. well, where's the money coming from? they're not raising taxes, they're just spending money. and so the money is being created, it's being conjured into existence by the federal reserve, but that is inflation. you see every single dollar that the federal government spends, the american public has to cover the costs. and so they're not going to take our money through tax. and they're going to take our per sting power through inflation. and so they print all this money, the government spends the money, but the federal reserve prince the money, and it goes into the economy. and now as non productive unemployed, people go to buy stuff. they didn't help produce. all that happens is the price
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goes up and it's amazing that people don't understand or they expect that we can all live all this government for free. there is no thing is a free lunch we're spending is going to keep getting worse. and of course, as government spends more it week as the economy, which means even more spending, inflation is going to go through the roof and we keep talking about the 1970 s. what we're going to experience is going to be far worse. and in fact, it probably already is worse than the 1970 s. if we were using the cpi that existed back and then to measure prices right now, we would see that the cpi is already rising at a faster rate than it ever did that i havanese and we're just calling out from here . okay, well let me go to pete in great barrington. i mean then how does all of this end here? because it seems like it's, we're chasing our tail here because you know,
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you can pump in all of this money here. but if people can afford goods, then you're going to start seeing sectors of the economy collapsing here. i mean, how we, how do you get out of this trap? the trap of just keep pumping money because the more you pump, the lessons worth go ahead, peak and great bear out some, you know, someone is going to have to be the adult in the room and eventually had to take the action that will and this in the late 70 was it was paul volcker. we don't know the name of the person at least i don't think we do. we do it this time. but you know, the government, it tends to tend to prolong these things and generate more and more unintended consequences as inflation started to rise in the seventy's fiction put on price controls. and then host of other things happened about 50 years ago. actually almost to the day to few months away, we had the final several of the dollar from gold. i was, i think, august 15th, 1971. and so eventually somebody is going to have to be a really unpopular person and either try to choke off the flow,
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new money in the money supply. or maybe, you know what, you would hope that they would look at the, the, the, the incentives that the fed faces, which are highly symmetrical. you know, everybody loves lower interest rates are more money, but people don't usually like rising interest rate and, and a decrease in the, in the money supply. so someone else is going to have to rise up and do the unpopular things. and although they won't be liked for it, they will be doing the right thing and they will be doing something really sort of of her own or should at that point. okay, so here in moscow here, i mean, how is this going to put effect the emerging markets? i mean, 1st of all, a lot of these economies are still feeling the, the, the very strong impact of the coven crisis. i mean, western agencies tend to focus on western countries here, but when you look at country, you know, go to asia, we have india has a major crisis still dealing with it. south america also here. i mean, how is this good? we have a 3rd of inflation here,
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and we still have the supply chains that are been cut or very, very weak here. how does it, how does the global economy recover from this? because governments are always looking at single countries here. but if we look at it and broadly here, i mean, it seems to me they're going to be on very much on the short end of the stick here . i mean, you start recovering and then also you get this huge wave of in place and coming out you well yeah theories is exactly the point. so colby is still here and the war results still here. so i'm not only on like a developed market, but also in emerging markets. so the problem is still here and uncertainty still here. but again, i would note to point here that i was already talked about is that inflation is high and emerging market. but sometimes it's even lower than it in develop market or in, you know, so that's actually makes like the position in, in, in financial markets. it's actually means that the merchant market currency,
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it could potentially gain from, from, from the new reality. let's see. so they potentially could feel stronger than us door going forward. and the 2nd point is that probably, you know, we could, we could be in a case over the 17th. but we could also be in, in the top of 2008, just because i, i remember that that was a hot topic, a global patient, as it is now in the top of many. and it ends up with a huge correction in financial markets. and to cruise the fall. so i think that though i'm not that concerned about like singable things, i'm pretty much concerned about credit bubbles and potential creditors and the potential correction that could follow. so we want, we could wait for it. let's say another blacks want to come to just to rigor, the correction that would be a very broad base. that's exactly where i wanted to go. peter well, in western here. i mean what we see here with all of this cash injections here is
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this huge. i mean, we talked about like the housing bubble, but i think almost every sector is turned into a bubble right now. it's really quite terrify watching it here. the amount of money that is being pumped in, it's over the last 14 months, it's hard to comprehend. and it's out there and it's just not how we think it's just about what sector it seems to me. this is like a perfect storm to collide. go ahead, peter. oh, sure. because the federal reserve and the reckless monetary policy is just about every single financial asset is dramatically miss price. and that has, you know, tremendous distortions in the economy and massive negative implications. just look at the bond market. look at the yield on a 10 year us treasury, which is below one and a half percent is like 1.4 percent. inflation is 5 times that and look at the yield . there is no way that that yield reflects reality. it of x. 2 it reflects fantasy
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and everything is price to fantasy. you know, you have the extreme examples in means stops, oxer crip, the currencies, but the fed has done tremendous damage and there is no savior on the horizon that's going to do the right thing like paul vulgar because the consequences are doing of doing the right thing are so horrific at this point that they're never going to be tried. but of course, the consequences of continued can do the neuron thing are even more horrific. but that's what's gonna happen because politicians don't give a damn about that. all they want to do is kick the can down the road as long as they can. they don't care, they make the problem worse just so long as it blows up later, rather than sooner. and that is what is going to happen. but i think on the emerging markets, they are going to finally be the big beneficiaries because we're going to print the dollar into oblivion, the dollar is going to crack. and then what is going to happen is a lot of the goods that are being sent to the united states are no longer going to
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come to the united states because nobody here will be able to afford to buy them. and so all those goods that are produced abroad will stay abroad and so prices will come down for people in emerging markets as their currencies go, way up and things become cheaper for them as americans get priced out of all these mark is because our current is gonna lose so much value that we can no longer afford to buy the things that we're buying. now pete in, great barrington addressed that issue as well because you know, not only was there a rotation of the dollar before all of this it seems to be on steroids right now. again, so short sighted so short sighted. go ahead, pete. the great barrington. yeah. so i just, i need to mention this in economics. we sometimes talk about a signal extraction problem, right? so it can be difficult to determine what things are injecting money and goods. for example, we have the demand for goods and services, drip that demand for the dollar itself. we have inflationary banks,
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which makes numbers tricky to reach. my point is that it is undoubtedly true. we've had the largest increase in the money supply, and it's about time in history. but also we had the entire nation blocked down. as somebody reopen, basically the same time, we had a fixed amount of goods and services suddenly house upon by many tide, more consumers unusual. all right, so my point is i advocate being prepared, not panicking, having hedges, but the people been saying hybrid patients right around the corner since 1982. they haven't done this any good. so be prepared. don't panic, especially when the data is still mixed in somebody inconclusive. ok, well, it's sophia here in moscow. i mean, this has been a very depressing program here. i mean, how does this all end here? i mean, we gave, you could give like an russian accent here. i mean, i've been told that economists think that the russian economy is overheating. how do you see it one minute last, last comment? go ahead. well, i would say that to me now with the nurse, what do you see there?
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she's a very foss recovery, but i would expect us to be like very short term ethics. but still with spec to see grew up with 4.0, which is the largest, didn't indicate. so were nice catch up, grow full of what but more modern growth next year. well, did you have a normalization of the monetary policy and the fiscal consolidation inside? so that actually means that they can pretty much balance now. so, and that actually means that another strong point is bad. credit bubble is not any fuel for either russia or neighbors. ok, well we, we ended on a good note there, but one thing i've learned in this program here, the dollar has a very treacherous future. i'm a, i'm very worried about it. i want to take my guess in great barrington, west and in moscow and thanks to be worth for watching us here to see you next time and remember cross talk roles. ah
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big announcement coming out of new york where governor andrew cuomo announces he's quitting amid allegations of sexual harassment. thereby falling victim to the very me to can use that himself. he claims to support and then a blow to that cause at the head of the charity that supports victims of sexual harassment also quits down to pressure over her ties. andrew cuomo today march 60 years since the us 1st used agent orange and b at dom herbicide proven to cause serious health issues among both locals and american soldiers. a veteran tells us time men are made. we really need people to sit down and take a look and.
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