Talking about the Federal Reserve anchoring inflation at 2%, it sounds simple, but in reality, it’s almost an impossible task.
Why is that? The 2% figure itself is not an economic law, but a narrative woven within the old dollar system. For this explanation to hold, several preconditions must be met: fiscal restraint, smooth global trade, cheap energy prices, a young population structure, and manufacturing that can be outsourced.
But here’s the problem—none of these preconditions currently exist.
What is the current fiscal structure in the United States? The deficit has become rigid, and the debt scale must be slowly absorbed through time and inflation. Under these circumstances, the Federal Reserve is no longer an independent monetary authority; it’s essentially a liquidity adjustment tool for the fiscal system. And what about 2%? It’s just a psychological market signal, impossible to enforce in practice.
Looking deeper, why has US inflation remained so low over the past thirty years? It’s not because the Fed is particularly clever, but because globalization has taken the burden. The manufacturing chains in China, East Asia, and around the world have maintained low inflation and high asset prices in the dollar system through real labor, energy, and environmental costs.
This accounting is becoming increasingly difficult to balance. For risk assets like BTC and ETH, the Fed’s pace of rate cuts and changes in inflation expectations directly influence market liquidity trends.
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CrossChainMessenger
· 3h ago
Basically, the Federal Reserve is just putting on a show; the 2% is just an illusionary promise.
The truth is, it can only be sustained by the dividends of globalization. The current system has already collapsed... the crypto world has long seen through all of this.
If the Federal Reserve were truly independent, that would be strange. Ultimately, it's just a cash machine for fiscal policy. How much benefit can the rate-cut cycle really give to BTC?
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quietly_staking
· 18h ago
Basically, 2% is just a gimmick; it's something that can't really hold up.
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FastLeaver
· 01-14 19:53
2% is basically a sham; by now, the Federal Reserve has long become a wage worker for the Treasury.
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GateUser-e19e9c10
· 01-14 19:53
At the end of the day, it's just the Federal Reserve bragging; 2% has long been a joke.
2% can't really hold anything down; the benefits of globalization are exhausted. What can they use now to sustain it? Just injecting liquidity. BTC is actually more attractive.
How long can money printing last? It really depends on how liquidity moves.
The independence of the Federal Reserve? It has long become a worker for fiscal policy.
By the way, this set of logic actually makes sense when applied to crypto. Change inflation expectations, and asset prices will turn upside down. We need to keep up with the rhythm.
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LiquidityLarry
· 01-14 19:52
To be honest, 2% is just an illusion. Now that the globalized benefits are exhausted, what can the Federal Reserve rely on for support?
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MevShadowranger
· 01-14 19:50
In plain terms, the Federal Reserve is just bluffing; 2% is just a smokescreen.
The benefits of globalization are exhausted. Now, how can they maintain that narrative? Printing money is the real business.
For the crypto world, it's actually a positive; liquidity will inevitably need an outlet.
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RektButStillHere
· 01-14 19:49
The core is that the 2% talk was just a big hype from the start, and now the hype can't even be spread anymore.
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SolidityStruggler
· 01-14 19:43
Basically, the Federal Reserve is just bragging; the 2% rhetoric has long been bankrupt.
Talking about the Federal Reserve anchoring inflation at 2%, it sounds simple, but in reality, it’s almost an impossible task.
Why is that? The 2% figure itself is not an economic law, but a narrative woven within the old dollar system. For this explanation to hold, several preconditions must be met: fiscal restraint, smooth global trade, cheap energy prices, a young population structure, and manufacturing that can be outsourced.
But here’s the problem—none of these preconditions currently exist.
What is the current fiscal structure in the United States? The deficit has become rigid, and the debt scale must be slowly absorbed through time and inflation. Under these circumstances, the Federal Reserve is no longer an independent monetary authority; it’s essentially a liquidity adjustment tool for the fiscal system. And what about 2%? It’s just a psychological market signal, impossible to enforce in practice.
Looking deeper, why has US inflation remained so low over the past thirty years? It’s not because the Fed is particularly clever, but because globalization has taken the burden. The manufacturing chains in China, East Asia, and around the world have maintained low inflation and high asset prices in the dollar system through real labor, energy, and environmental costs.
This accounting is becoming increasingly difficult to balance. For risk assets like BTC and ETH, the Fed’s pace of rate cuts and changes in inflation expectations directly influence market liquidity trends.