The Pak Banker

2023 is shaping up to be a very bad year

- Grady Means

As the new year approaches, it is time to consider how 2023 might unfold. Of course, the starting point, the contempora­ry context, would be the recent history of COVID lockdowns; massive government spending and inflation and constricti­ve energy policies driving up energy and food prices, as well as most "downstream prices," and wiping out retirement savings; Fed strategies depressing the market; war in Ukraine threatenin­g nuclear confrontat­ion; China's rising political aggression; political corruption of government institutio­ns and apparent government-led attacks on the First Amendment, at least according to the "Twitter Files"; rising urban crime; a surge in illegal immigratio­n bringing drugs, crime and a disrupted labor market; a growing culture war on women, fueled both by the Dobbs decision and the rising political activism of the trans community; and chaos in the American educationa­l system, leading to a sharp decline in student performanc­e.

Few would call 2020, 2021 and 2022 "good years" for America. Some might call them disasters and 2023 may well be worse. To begin with, there is no sign that the forces fueling these problems will abate or be reversed. If anything, they may become more intense.

Rightly or wrongly, the White House and the Democrat-led Senate, as well as most progressiv­e interest groups, read the midterm elections as support for current policy directions.

The White House will not make any centrist tack and will continue full speed ahead on highspendi­ng and fossil fuel-constraini­ng policies. The suicidal support for the omnibus budget and spending bill by Republican­s in the Senate handicaps the incoming Republican-led House from moving to get the budget, appropriat­ions, and spending under control.

It also assures another round of inflation, and insulates the Democrats from political attack since Senate Republican­s went along with it and now partly own the coming inflation, rising interest rates, and economic contractio­n or recession predicted by many financial leaders and economists.

At the same time, the White House will continue to push fossil fuel energy restrictio­ns, even though it is totally futile since America lacks

the battery storage to support rapid conversion to solar and wind; unsubsidiz­ed solar and wind (with the exception of utility-scale solar) are dramatical­ly less economical­ly efficient than fossil fuel, nuclear and hydro power; and the national grid to support full electrific­ation will take three decades to install. Foreign adversarie­s will continue to burn coal and make our "conversion" both pointless and a huge threat to national military and economic security.

The national strategic energy reserve has been substantia­lly drained and cannot continue to cushion price spikes, and the White House foreign policy has completely failed to get our oil-producing foreign adversarie­s to cut us a break on price or supply.

Economics is economics. The national debt-to-GDP ratio is higher than it has ever been - some might say approachin­g bankruptcy.

The Inflation Reduction Act (a sad joke on Americans), the omnibus bill that no one read, and all the other huge spending bills will drive up the debt. Printing more dollars to cover the debt is the definition of inflation. It weakens the dollar as the world's reserve currency (a budget, trade and national security disaster), as well as drives up the price of everything for U.S. consumers, especially hurting the poor and most middle-class Americans.

Those non-working or parttime working Americans cushioned by COVID relief will see it run dry. The rising debt levels of most Americans will get a crushing blow as interest rates continue to surge.

Retirement accounts and home values will decline. The likelihood of rising taxes will be the final blow to American households.

Of course, continued unrestrict­ed illegal immigratio­n - the White House shows no real seriousnes­s at all in fixing it - takes jobs away from poor Americans, brings in record amounts of drugs, drives up social welfare costs (i.e., spending, inflation, taxes), and destabiliz­es communitie­s.

In health, America is spending more and more on health care, yet Americans are getting sicker and dying younger. Food is becoming less and less healthy and more and more expensive. The majority of American youth no longer qualify for military service. The White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health was dominated by the consumer food industry, Big AG, and Big Pharma and was a huge disappoint­ment for some who hoped it might reverse current trends in 2023. Nope.

On the foreign policy and national security fronts, both our allies and especially our enemies have taken the measure of President Biden and the defense, foreign policy, intelligen­ce and domestic security leadership and found them to be politicize­d, feckless and incompeten­t.

 ?? ?? ‘‘The White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health was dominated by the consumer food industry, Big AG, and Big Pharma and was a huge disappoint­ment for some who hoped it might reverse current trends in 2023.”
‘‘The White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health was dominated by the consumer food industry, Big AG, and Big Pharma and was a huge disappoint­ment for some who hoped it might reverse current trends in 2023.”

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