Clicky

  • Login
  • Register
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
Submit
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
No Result
View All Result
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result

Why the $38 trillion national debt doomed Fed independence regardless of the Trump/Powell drama, top economist says

January 13, 2026
in Business
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
Why the  trillion national debt doomed Fed independence regardless of the Trump/Powell drama, top economist says
0
SHARES
ShareShareShareShareShare

Why the $38 trillion national debt doomed Fed independence regardless of the Trump/Powell drama, top economist says

When Fed Chair Jerome Powell announced Sunday evening he was under criminal investigation from the DOJ this week, the markets braced for a shock.  The probe—centered on a $2.6 billion renovation of the Fed’s Washington headquarters—was immediately branded by an unusually direct Powell as a “pretext” to force interest rate cuts. Futures went down.

READ ALSO

Indonesia’s Danantara bets a new $6B SOE can save a textiles from tariffs and competition

Elon Musk’s SpaceX buys xAI in stunning deal valued at $1.25 trillion ahead of looming IPO

Yet, Monday came, and while gold and silver went vertical, equities stayed calm and the dollar barely drifted. To economist Tyler Cowen, the renowned libertarian from George Mason University and author of the influential Marginal Revolution blog, this lack of market panic is the most revealing part of the drama. It isn’t that investors trust the administration’s motives; it’s that they have already accepted the “ugly little truth” that the Federal Reserve’s independence is a relic of a bygone era. 

“What Trump did was terrible,” Cowen said on the technology podcast TBPN, referring to the administration’s erratic, “Captain Queeg” style of institutional pressure. “But to me, the reason markets didn’t react more is because we already wrecked the independence of the Fed. That’s the ugly little truth behind this story. It was already wrecked.”

In Cowen’s telling, the damage was done years ago, through fiscal policy. Budget deals, tax cuts and a chronic deficit have steadily narrowed the Fed’s real freedom to act, regardless of its formal mandate.

“The basic problem is our debt and deficits are so high that over time, we will monetize them to some extent and have higher inflation because we prefer that over higher taxes, no matter what we might say,” Cowen said on technology show TBPN.

That preference, Cowen argues, quietly undermines central bank independence. Even without overt political pressure, a heavily indebted democracy is one that limits its own monetary choices. At some point, inflation becomes the least politically painful way to manage obligations that voters are unwilling to finance through taxes or spending cuts.

A grim echo

This diagnosis is a grim echo of the work of Ray Dalio, the billionaire founder of top hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, who has long warned of the “Big Cycle” debt trap. Dalio’s framework suggests that nations with massive debts eventually run out of good options. They are left with a choice between three politically poisonous options: austerity (massive spending cuts), default (which would be unthinkable for a reserve currency), or inflation (“printing money” in order to devalue the debt). 

Dalio has frequently agreed with Cowen that for the United States, inflation is the only path forward, since it is an invisible tax that a democracy will always prefer over the political suicide of massive tax hikes or the gutting of social programs. Speaking with fellow billionaire, Carlyle co-founder David Rubenstein, Dalio recently said, “My grandchildren, and great grandchildren not yet born, are going to be paying off this debt in devalued dollars.”

Cowen offered a prediction about how what Dalio calls the “ugly deleveraging” will look: the U.S. may require half a decade of 7% inflation to erode the debt’s value relative to the size of the economy.

“It’s highly unpleasant, and a lot of people will be thrown out of work and living standards will be lower,” Cowen said. “But we’ve already spent that money. We can’t default, and that’s what’s facing us over the next 10 to 15 years,” implying that, while default would ordinarily be a country’s way out of this kind of dilemma, America’s status as the richest economy in world history and the home of the world’s reserve currency make that unfeasible.

The irony, Cowen notes, is that America’s unique status allows it to run higher debt than almost any other nation, even the wealthy ones. That privilege may boost living standards today, but it still weakens political discipline tomorrow, allowing leaders to not only “get away with more debt” but also explicitly destabilize the Fed without worrying too much about market backlash. 

Although neither Dalio nor Cowen have taken this argument about the debt into the feud between Powell and Trump, at its heart lies a similar dynamic: how can the U.S. improve living standards for its lower and middle class? Trump has been badgering Powell about interest rate cuts that would bring down mortgage rates and ease housing affordability, but that runs the risk of fueling an even higher inflation wave down the road, or sooner. 

Albert Edwards, an outspoken and eccentric global strategist for Societe Generale, sounded eerily similar to Dalio and Cowen when he spoke to Fortune in November. “We’re going to end up with runaway inflation at some point,” Edwards said, “because, I mean, that’s the end game, right? There’s no appetite to cut back the deficits.”

The god out of the machine

There is, however, a deus ex machina that could change the course of things: the productivity miracle that many economists expect to come, driven by artificial intelligence. If AI could boost U.S. GDP growth by a full percentage point per year, Cowen said, the country might grow its way out of the debt trap without resorting to a decade of high inflation. Yet he is skeptical. 

Roughly half the U.S. economy—government, higher education, much of healthcare, and the nonprofit sector—is structurally sluggish, he argues. AI may save workers enough time in these sectors to “hang out more at the water cooler,” but not enough to dramatically raise output. Meanwhile, innovation might just concentrate at already-productive sectors of the economy. Without a radical efficiency gain in the half of the economy that doesn’t produce “white or black-belt” AI tools, the debt clock will continue to outrun the AI revolution.

The result is a new, more dangerous era for the U.S. dollar.

“I’m not telling you not to worry” about Fed independence, Cowen said. “I’m telling you should have been worried to begin with.”

And yet, as Morgan Stanley noted in early January, something else appears on the calculus along with the latest rumbles about central bank independence: a 4.9% boost to annualized productivity, as suggested by fresh third-quarter GDP data. 

“We believe much of the rise is cyclical,” economists led by Michael Gapen noted, adding “it remains an open question as to what is driving the productivity acceleration.”

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePin
Previous Post

Mike Tomlin steps down as Steelers coach in another NFL bombshell

Next Post

U.S workers just took home their smallest share of capital since 1947, at least

Related Posts

Indonesia’s Danantara bets a new B SOE can save a textiles from tariffs and competition
Business

Indonesia’s Danantara bets a new $6B SOE can save a textiles from tariffs and competition

February 3, 2026
Elon Musk’s SpaceX buys xAI in stunning deal valued at .25 trillion ahead of looming IPO
Business

Elon Musk’s SpaceX buys xAI in stunning deal valued at $1.25 trillion ahead of looming IPO

February 3, 2026
‘We are an n of 1’: Palantir hails ‘incredible’ earnings as stock rockets nearly 8% after hours
Business

‘We are an n of 1’: Palantir hails ‘incredible’ earnings as stock rockets nearly 8% after hours

February 3, 2026
‘Today’ show host Savannah Guthrie’s 84-year-old mother is missing, authorities suspect crime
Business

‘Today’ show host Savannah Guthrie’s 84-year-old mother is missing, authorities suspect crime

February 3, 2026
Stocks fall as plunging metals fan global selloff
Business

Stocks fall as plunging metals fan global selloff

February 2, 2026
What CFOs at Adobe, Dataminr, and Huntington say about scaling AI
Business

What CFOs at Adobe, Dataminr, and Huntington say about scaling AI

February 2, 2026
Next Post
U.S workers just took home their smallest share of capital since 1947, at least

U.S workers just took home their smallest share of capital since 1947, at least

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

What's New Here!

Belkin announces a wireless HDMI dongle that doesn’t need Wi-Fi access

Belkin announces a wireless HDMI dongle that doesn’t need Wi-Fi access

January 5, 2026
Jeff Bezos tells Gen Z entrepreneurs to gain work experience before launching new companies

Jeff Bezos tells Gen Z entrepreneurs to gain work experience before launching new companies

January 12, 2026
BetMGM bonus code NYPDM1500: Get a 20% first deposit match up to ,500 for Seahawks vs. 49ers

BetMGM bonus code NYPDM1500: Get a 20% first deposit match up to $1,500 for Seahawks vs. 49ers

January 3, 2026
Rams’ Nate Landman on journey from Falcons release to brink of Super Bowl

Rams’ Nate Landman on journey from Falcons release to brink of Super Bowl

January 24, 2026
Reminiscing on better Jets times in Buffalo as Highmark Stadium finale approaches

Reminiscing on better Jets times in Buffalo as Highmark Stadium finale approaches

January 4, 2026
Meta’s Zuckerberg gets green light from Wall Street to invest in AI

Meta’s Zuckerberg gets green light from Wall Street to invest in AI

January 29, 2026
Salesforce’s Benioff calls for AI regulation after recent suicides

Salesforce’s Benioff calls for AI regulation after recent suicides

January 20, 2026

About

World Tribune is an online news portal that shares the latest news on world, business, health, tech, sports, and related topics.

Follow us

Recent Posts

  • Sam Darnold serenaded with ‘Ham for Sam’ chants at Super Bowl Opening Night
  • Indonesia’s Danantara bets a new $6B SOE can save a textiles from tariffs and competition
  • The ‘accountability’ fueling Mikal Bridges’ Knicks shift
  • How silver market has morphed into meme trading

Newslatter

Loading
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In