The
"Massive Gift" That Keeps On Giving: How QE Boosted
Inequality To Levels Surpassing The Great Depression
31
March, 2014
A
week ago, the official truth about QE, once upon a time
mischaracterized as being a means to boost US employment (which is
misreported in such an optimistically biased way that even
the Fed now admits is ridiculous, and
had to scrap its forward guidance as a result) and grow the economy,
emerged when the Fed's Fisher admitted that "QE
was a massive gift intended to boost wealth."
Fisher
did not need to clarify just who the gift was aimed at - it was
clear. But just in case there is any confusion, here is a chart
confirming that all the events of the past 5 years have done,
courtesy of the Fed's manipulation of the stock market to all time
artificial highs, is to push the ratio of the average income of the
"Top 10%" to the "Bottom 10%" to a previously
unseen level, wildly surpassing the previous record inequality highs
that culminated in the Great Depression, and which were subsequently
rapidly "equalized" by WWII.
Still
not convinced? Another way of showing this - the ratio of the net
worth of the top 20% of households as measured by income relative to
the bottom 20% rose to 9.3x in 2011 from 5.7x in 2005.
And
another observation: when it comes to inequality between the top and
the bottom, the US continues to be the most unequal country in the
world, a distinction it first regained in the 1980s courtesy of Alan
Greenspan's "Great Moderation." We point this out just in
case there still is any confusion who the Fed truly works for...
Why?
Thank the death of the US middle class, because that is precisely who
Bernanke, and now Yellen, means to exterminate no matter the costs.
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