Tag Archives: non-money savings
Technical Notes for ‘3 Underappreciated Indicators’
This is an appendix for our earlier post, “3 Underappreciated Indicators to Guide You through a Debt-Saturated Economy.” We’ll share a few extra charts and describe our use of the Fed’s flow of funds data, in Q&A format.
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Tagged bank-created money, credit market instruments, government deficits, monetary policy, monetary targeting, money supply aggregates, money supply growth, money supply targeting, net bank lending, non-money savings, personal savings rates, personal sector
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3 Underappreciated Indicators to Guide You through a Debt-Saturated Economy
If you’re my generation or older, you may remember taking the original Pepsi Challenge – the Coke versus Pepsi taste testing booths that you would find at sporting events, fairs and similar venues. I took the Challenge and stuck with … Continue reading
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Tagged Austrian business cycle theory, bank balance sheets, Chicago Plan, creeping inflation, current account deficits, debt ratios, economic volatility, fractional reserve, Great Inflation, mainstream economic thought, money printing, non-money savings, Pepsi challenge, personal savings rates, public deficits, quantitative easing, recession indicators, risky borrowing, vicious loop, virtuous loop
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