560: American Economist and Professor, Steve Hanke, on Rewriting the Rules of Our Financial System

560: American Economist and Professor, Steve Hanke, on Rewriting the Rules of Our Financial System

Central banks in major economies have repeatedly misread inflation trends by relying on models that omit a fundamental economic lever: the money supply. In this episode, economist Steve Hanke offers a detailed critique of prevailing post-Keynesian frameworks and the policy missteps that have followed. Drawing on historical and current data, Hanke underscores the predictive power of the quantity theory of money, a model largely excluded from central bank thinking, and explains how ignoring this leads to erroneous inflation forecasts and misguided interventions.

The discussion outlines how inflation, often attributed to exogenous shocks such as supply chain disruptions or geopolitical events, is more reliably explained by changes in the money supply. Hanke presents evidence that inflation today is the result of decisions made one to two years prior, making it critical to focus on monetary trends rather than short-term data fluctuations. He further contrasts U.S. and Chinese monetary responses, highlighting how both under- and over-corrections in money supply growth have resulted in either recessionary pressures or deflation.

Key insights from the episode include:

- The quantity theory of money remains one of the most reliable frameworks for anticipating inflation, yet is absent from mainstream economic models used by central banks.

- Inflation is always a monetary phenomenon, rising or falling primarily in response to shifts in the money supply, not due to external shocks, which only affect relative prices.

- U.S. monetary policy is currently on a path toward recession, not inflation, due to anemic money supply growth since 2022, a trend Hanke predicts will continue unless reversed.

- Regime uncertainty, policy volatility that undermines business investment, amplifies economic stagnation. Drawing parallels to the New Deal era, Hanke warns that unclear or shifting fiscal and regulatory rules will delay recovery even further.

- Most of the money in circulation is created by commercial banks, not central banks. Post-2008 regulations have constrained these institutions, diminishing their role in supporting economic growth.

Taken together, these points call for a recalibration of macroeconomic policy, placing money supply at the center of analysis and re-empowering commercial banks to function as essential components of the financial system. For senior leaders navigating strategic decisions, the episode provides a timely and data-grounded lens on the structural drivers shaping inflation, recession risks, and economic stability.

Get Steve's book here: https://shorturl.at/t5uDw

Making Money Work: How to Rewrite the Rules of Our Financial System

Here are some free gifts for you:

Overall Approach Used in Well-Managed Strategy Studies free download: www.firmsconsulting.com/OverallApproach

McKinsey & BCG winning resume free download: www.firmsconsulting.com/resumepdf

Enjoying this episode? Get access to sample advanced training episodes here: www.firmsconsulting.com/promo

Avsnitt(500)

636: Dr. John La Puma on the Hidden Health Costs of Indoor Living

636: Dr. John La Puma on the Hidden Health Costs of Indoor Living

Dr. John La Puma discusses how everyday environmental choices shape sleep, cognition, and long-term health. Drawing on research from medicine, neuroscience, and environmental science, he explains why ...

16 Mars 46min

635: McKinsey Senior Partner Chris Bradley on The Real Drivers of Long-Term Economic Growth

635: McKinsey Senior Partner Chris Bradley on The Real Drivers of Long-Term Economic Growth

Chris Bradley, Senior Partner at McKinsey & Company and Director of the McKinsey Global Institute, discusses the ideas behind his book A Century of Plenty and the long-term drivers of economic growth....

11 Mars 54min

634: BCG's Julia Dhar on Why 70% of Major Change Efforts Fail

634: BCG's Julia Dhar on Why 70% of Major Change Efforts Fail

Julia Dhar, Managing Director at Boston Consulting Group and founder of the firm's Behavioral Science Lab, joins us to discuss why most organizational change efforts fail and what leaders can do diffe...

9 Mars 51min

633: The Invincible Brain with Johns Hopkins Professor Dr. Majid Fotuhi

633: The Invincible Brain with Johns Hopkins Professor Dr. Majid Fotuhi

Dr. Majid Fotuhi, neurologist, neuroscientist, and adjunct professor at Johns Hopkins University, has spent decades studying how the brain ages and what determines whether cognitive performance declin...

4 Mars 55min

632: Building Healthier Workplaces Through Attuned Leadership (with Nidhi Tewari)

632: Building Healthier Workplaces Through Attuned Leadership (with Nidhi Tewari)

Nidhi Tewari, a highly sought after wellbeing and work culture speaker who applies her experience as a licensed therapist to the work world, has spent more than a decade advising high-performing leade...

2 Mars 54min

631: How Elon Musk Thinks (with Charles Steel)

631: How Elon Musk Thinks (with Charles Steel)

Charles Steel reflects on "more than two decades in private equity, banking," combined with "public service roles, including advising Tony Blair," and how these experiences led him to a late but power...

25 Feb 52min

630: Business Innovation and Strategic Growth Advisor, Lorraine Marchand, on Sustaining Growth Through Innovation

630: Business Innovation and Strategic Growth Advisor, Lorraine Marchand, on Sustaining Growth Through Innovation

Lorraine Marchand, startup CEO, advisor to Johnson & Johnson, member of the Pharmaceutical Advisory Board at Columbia Business School, and faculty at Wharton, discusses how leaders can sustain growth ...

23 Feb 53min

629: Ashley Herd, Former Head of HR North America at McKinsey, on What Effective Managers Actually Do

629: Ashley Herd, Former Head of HR North America at McKinsey, on What Effective Managers Actually Do

Ashley Herd, former Head of HR North America at McKinsey, joins this episode to discuss what effective leadership looks like in practice, especially in environments defined by speed, pressure, and inc...

18 Feb 56min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
varvet
rss-jossan-nina
rss-svart-marknad
rss-borsens-finest
avanzapodden
uppgang-och-fall
rss-dagen-med-di
fill-or-kill
lastbilspodden
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
rss-den-nya-ekonomin
bathina-en-podcast
dynastin
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
svd-tech-brief
bilar-med-sladd
24fragor
market-makers