#234129
Re: Pulso de Mercado: Intradía
Espero que esta compilación de datos que he encontrado no sea cierta.. porque suena muy mal:
The Federal Reserve currently buys 54.04% of all new Federal debt, trillions more in mortgage backed securities all at noncompetitive rates using money they've created with keypunch entries, these purchases have artificially contained interest rates since 2008. When this slows or stops who's going to replace the Fed?
The Federal Reserve currently buys 54.04% of all new Federal debt, trillions more in mortgage backed securities all at noncompetitive rates using money they've created with keypunch entries, these purchases have artificially contained interest rates since 2008. When this slows or stops who's going to replace the Fed?
From 2008 through 2019 (144 months)
- Federal debt grew by 13.972 trillion from 8.86 trillion to 22.833 trillion
- The Federal Reserve created 3.274 trillion dollars with keypunch entries
- 13.972 trillion is more than 3 times the fiscal cost of World war 2 in 2021 USD
- 13.972 trillion is more than the combined total debt of United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, Mexico, China and Russia total population of these countries 1.816 billion, U.S., 331 million.
2020 through 21 October 2021 (last 22 months)
- Federal debt grew by 6.072 trillion from 22,833 trillion to 28.905 trillion
- The Federal Reserve created 4.315 trillion dollars with keypunch entries
- 6.072 trillion in new Federal debt over the last 22 months is 86 billion more than the combined debt of Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Russia and India, population of these countries 1.918 billion, U.S. 331 million.
- 6.072 trillion is more than 6 times the cost of FDR's new deal
Since 2008
- 40.970 trillion in cumulative Federal Revenue
- 60.888 trillion in cumulative Federal Spending
- 19.917 trillion in new Federal debt
- 7.590 trillion created by the Federal Reserve with keypunch entries
- Cumulative median personal income 2008-2021 $684,478
- Federal Revenue per employed person $277,670
- Federal revenue as a percent of median income 40.69%
- Federal spending per employed person $412,654
- Federal spending as a percent of median income 60.46%
- New Federal debt per employed person $134,985
- Money created by the Federal Reserve per employed person $51,441
Corrupt Incompetence during the 21st century has reduced annual Federal Revenue to a mere 11.16% of total federal debt, down from 35.98% at the end of 2000 and 28.69% in 2007.
An 11.16% annual Federal revenue to total Federal debt ratio makes it impossible for the U.S. to accurately report inflation, normalize interest rates or any increase in Federal expenses pegged to reported inflation such as Social Security, Medicare, Military and Civilian employee pensions.
Yes, the U.S is going to see the largest increase in Social Security beneficiary payments in 40 years (5.90% in 2022) but overall increases including the one on deck have not kept pace with true inflation, this increase does confirm inflation is here to stay or this 5.9% increase in 2022 wouldn't be happening.