What the Fed’s Inflation Target Really Means
Fergus Hodgson, September 7, 2020
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The mainstream press has called the Federal Reserve’s recent decision to let inflation run higher amid the pandemic a historic change.
For David Collum, a chemistry professor at Cornell University turned investment analyst, it is actually the admission of a long-running trend: the fiat-bubble economy needs ever-lower interest rates to sustain itself.
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This week in our Discovery Group segment, we interview the president and CEO of Kodiak Copper (TSX-V: KDK), Claudia Tornquist, who shares a game-changing discovery at the firm’s MDP project in British Columbia.
Recommended Links
- Follow David on Twitter and visit Zero Hedge.
- The Chapwood Index.
- “What Do Changes in the Fed’s Longer-Run Goals, Monetary Strategy Statement Mean?” The Brookings Institution.
- “The Fed Risks Higher Inflation to Boost Jobs,” Financial Times.
- Get a copy of Austrian School for Investors: Austrian Investing between Inflation and Deflation, co-authored by Ronald, Rahim Taghizadegan, Mark Valek, and Heinz Blasnik.
If You Liked This Episode
- “Peter Boockvar: The Fed Has Overdosed on Social Justice,” Gold Newsletter Podcast.
- “The Monetary Roots of Generational Alienation,” Gold Newsletter Podcast.
- “A Bubble Like Never Before,” Gold Newsletter Podcast.
- “How Inflation Finally Caught Up with the Fed,” Gold Newsletter Podcast.
Fergus Hodgson is Gold Newsletter’s roving editor. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.